Fighting stops in the eastern borderline of the Republic of Armenia – MoD Armenia

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 21:53,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. As a result of the agreement reached through the Russian mediation, hostilities stopped in the eastern borderline of Armenia from 18:30, the situation has relatively stabilized, ARMENPRESS was informed from MoD Armenia.

“It should be reminded that on November 16, at around 13:00, the units of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces attacked the Armenian positions located in that direction of the border. The adversary used artillery, armored vehicles, firearms of various calibers.

As a result of the retaliatory actions of the Armenian side, the enemy has suffered a large loss of manpower, several units of military equipment have been destroyed or taken out of service. The Armenian side also has losses. At the moment, there are verified data about one victim, Meruzhan Harutyunyan,1991, a contract soldier. The number of injured is also being clarified. Another 12 servicemen have been captured,” the statement said.

Armenpress: Talking with Putin, Pashinyan strongly highlights Armenian-Russian strategic partnership in the existing situation

Talking with Putin, Pashinyan strongly highlights Armenian-Russian strategic partnership in the existing situation

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 22:05,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan had a telephone conversation with the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister, the Prime Minister presented in detail the latest developments on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Nikol Pashinyan stressed that the actions of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces are nothing but aggression against the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia. In the existing situation, the Prime Minister strongly highlighted the Armenian-Russian strategic partnership.

The commitment of the Armenian side to the trilateral statements of November 9, 2020 and January 11, 2021 was reaffirmed.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/16/2021

                                        Tuesday, 
Armenia-Azerbaijan Fighting Halted After Russia-Mediated Ceasefire
An Armenian soldier near a military position situated along the border with 
Azerbaijan (file photo)
Armenia has announced a Russia-mediated ceasefire after daylong heavy fighting 
along its border with Azerbaijan in which Yerevan admitted casualties and 
territorial losses.
The country’s Defense Ministry said that the ceasefire became effective at the 
eastern border with Azerbaijan at 6:30 pm on November 16 in accordance with the 
agreement reached through the mediation of the Russian side.
The ministry said that the situation has relatively stabilized at the moment.
Armenia’s military authorities added that information about the dead and wounded 
is being currently summarized.
“At this moment there are verified data about one victim, private Meruzhan 
Harutiunian, a contract soldier born in 1991. The number of wounded soldiers is 
also being verified. A total of 12 Armenian servicemen were taken prisoner,” the 
ministry said.
Earlier reports suggested that as many as 15 Armenian soldiers may have been 
killed during the fighting.
Speaking at an emergency meeting of the country’s Security Council today, 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian described the latest escalation at the 
border as Azerbaijan’s direct aggression against Armenia’s sovereign territory. 
He urged Armenia’s international partners to clearly condemn this aggression.
Azerbaijan has denied committing any aggression against Armenia, insisting that 
the latest border escalation is a result of provocations and an attack by the 
Armenian side.
Earlier, Armenia appealed to Russia, its key military and political ally, for 
assistance in defending against Azerbaijan.
It was reported that Pashinian had a telephone conversation with Russian 
President Vladimir Putin.
The Kremlin said the current situation at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border was 
discussed during the phone call initiated by the Armenian side.
“The sides agreed to continue contacts regarding this issue,” the report said.
Also, Russia’s Defense Minister Sergey Shoygu had separate telephone 
conversations with his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts.
Also today President of the European Council Charles Michel called both 
Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev to discuss the developments.
Before the phone call, Michel said on Twitter that the situation in the region 
remained “challenging,” and that the “EU is committed to work with partners to 
overcome tensions for a prosperous and stable South Caucasus.”
The Foreign Ministry of France, meanwhile, expressed concern over the border 
incidents between Armenia and Azerbaijan, urging the two sides to respect the 
ceasefire agreement.
In its turn, the Foreign Ministry of Iran called on the two sides to respect 
internationally recognized borders. Tehran also expressed readiness to help 
Armenia and Azerbaijan in the matter of resolving their differences.
The United Nations also called on Armenia and Azerbaijan to resolve issues 
through dialogue.
In contrast, Turkey has again openly sided with Azerbaijan in its standoff with 
Armenia. In a phone call with his Azerbaijani counterpart Zakir Hasanov reported 
by Azerbaijani media, Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar said that “Turkey, as 
always, supports Azerbaijan.”
Armenia and Azerbaijan waged a 44-day war over Nagorno-Karabakh last year. The 
hostilities in which nearly 7,000 people were killed were halted due to a 
Moscow-brokered ceasefire agreement that reaffirmed Azerbaijan’s territorial 
gains and brought about 2,000 Russian peacekeepers to the areas of the region 
remaining under the control of local ethnic Armenian forces.
Armenia Seeks International Condemnation Of ‘Azerbaijani Aggression’
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian addresses an emergency meeting of 
Armenia’s Security Council, Yerevan, .
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has called on Armenia’s international partners to 
condemn what he described as Azerbaijan’s aggression against his nation’s 
sovereign borders.
Speaking at an emergency meeting of the country’s Security Council late on 
Tuesday, Pashinian described the latest escalation as Azerbaijan’s direct 
aggression against Armenia’s sovereign territory.
“As a result of aggressive actions that began on May 12, 2021, Azerbaijan 
occupied around 41 square kilometers of Armenia’s sovereign territory. In 
conditions of the silence of our international partners Azerbaijan continues its 
aggressive actions… Azerbaijan and forces encouraging it are targeting our 
sovereignty, our statehood, our independence,” the Armenian leader said.
Pashinian, who also spoke about casualties suffered by Armenian armed forces in 
the border fighting, acknowledged that “we have had a hard day today and are 
living through hard times.”
“But today we have also shown that we are here, we do exist, we are a nation, we 
are a nation state and coercive language is unacceptable to us. We can 
negotiate, we can search and find mutually acceptable solutions, we behave like 
a responsible member of the international community, but we will not tolerate a 
language of arrogance spoken to us,” Pashinian stressed.
The head of the Armenian government called on the international community to 
issue ‘targeted’ statements condemning Azerbaijan’s aggression. “All talk about 
border disputes is absurd and meaningless. There is no border dispute. There is 
an act of aggression against Armenia’s sovereign territory,” he argued.
“We, the government and the people of the Republic of Armenia, are determined to 
defend our sovereignty, territorial integrity, statehood and independence with 
all available means. At the same time, we continue to underscore the need for a 
peaceful resolution of the situation,” Pashinian said, stressing that Yerevan 
remained committed to the terms of the Russia-brokered ceasefire in 
Nagorno-Karabakh signed by Armenia and Azerbaijan on November 9, 2020 and the 
further Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani statement of January 11, 2021 regarding the 
unblocking of regional transport links.
Armenia and Azerbaijan waged a 44-day war over Nagorno-Karabakh last year. The 
hostilities in which nearly 7,000 people were killed were halted due to a 
Moscow-brokered ceasefire agreement that confirmed Azerbaijan’s territorial 
gains and brought about 2,000 Russian peacekeepers to the areas of the region 
remaining under the control of local ethnic Armenian forces.
Unblocking of regional transport routes, which is part of the November 9, 2020 
ceasefire agreement, appears to have been differently interpreted in Yerevan and 
Baku as Armenia has resisted providing Azerbaijan with an exterritorial corridor 
to its Nakhichevan exclave, while agreeing to general unblocking of all roads in 
the region.
In an interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Tuesday senior member of 
Armenia’s ruling Civil Contract party Eduard Aghajanian claimed that Azerbaijan 
escalated the situation at the borders after failing in its policy to force 
Armenia to provide an exterritorial corridor to its Nakhichevan exclave.
Azerbaijan has denied committing any aggression against Armenia, insisting that 
the latest border escalation is a result of provocations and an attack by the 
Armenian side.
On Tuesday, Armenia appealed to Russia, its key military and political ally, for 
assistance in defending against Azerbaijan.
It was reported later today that Pashinian had a telephone conversation with 
Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The Kremlin said the current situation at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border was 
discussed during the phone call initiated by the Armenian side.
“The sides agreed to continue contacts regarding this issue,” the report said.
The Foreign Ministry of France, meanwhile, expressed concern over the border 
incidents between Armenia and Azerbaijan, urging the two sides to respect the 
ceasefire agreement.
In its turn, the Foreign Ministry of Iran called on the two sides to respect 
internationally recognized borders. Tehran also expressed readiness to help 
Armenia and Azerbaijan in the matter of resolving their differences.
Armenian, Azerbaijani Leaders Trade Barbs Amid Border Fighting
A combo photo of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (left) and Azerbaijani 
President Ilham Aliyev
The leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan have blamed each other for the latest 
major escalation along the two countries’ border in which over a dozen people 
have reportedly been killed or wounded.
In a telephone conversation with President of the European Council Charles 
Michel on Tuesday Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian claimed that “the 
Azerbaijani authorities are deliberately escalating the situation with the aim 
of aborting the implementation of trilateral agreements.”
As quoted by his press office, Pashinian said that “the international community 
should not remain indifferent to Azerbaijan’s encroachments on the sovereign 
territory of Armenia.”
Meanwhile, during his reported telephone conversation with the top EU official 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev accused the Armenian side of committing 
recent provocations in Nagorno-Karabakh and launching an offensive against 
Azerbaijan today. “It is the military and political leadership of Armenia that 
is responsible for the situation,” Aliyev said, as quoted by Azerbaijani media.
Before the phone call, Michel said on Twitter that the situation in the region 
remained “challenging,” and that the “EU is committed to work with partners to 
overcome tensions for a prosperous and stable South Caucasus.”
Armenia and Azerbaijan waged a 44-day war over Nagorno-Karabakh last year. The 
hostilities in which nearly 7,000 people were killed were halted due to a 
Moscow-brokered ceasefire agreement that confirmed Azerbaijan’s territorial 
gains and brought about 2,000 Russian peacekeepers to the areas of the region 
remaining under the control of local ethnic Armenian forces.
Unblocking of regional transport routes, which is part of the November 9, 2020 
agreement, appears to have been differently interpreted in Yerevan and Baku as 
Armenia has resisted providing Azerbaijan with an exterritorial corridor to its 
Nakhichevan exclave, while agreeing to general unblocking of all roads in the 
region.
In an interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Tuesday senior member of 
Armenia’s ruling Civil Contract party Eduard Aghajanian claimed that the current 
border escalation is a response by Azerbaijan to the failure of its policy to 
force Armenia to provide the corridor.
“The Republic of Armenia will remain sovereign and there will be no 
[exterritorial] corridor through its sovereign territory,” Aghajanian 
underscored. “The [sovereign] status of the Republic of Armenia that was formed 
in 1991 is not subject to negotiation.”
On Tuesday, Armenia appealed to Russia, its key military and political ally, for 
assistance in defending against Azerbaijan.
Opposition Demands Pashinian’s Resignation Amid Armenia-Azerbaijan Fighting
Armenia - Supporters of the opposition Hayastan alliance march to the Yerablur 
Military Pantheon, Yerevan, September 26, 2021.
A major opposition political party in Armenia has called for the resignation of 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and his government amid continuing border clashes 
with Azerbaijan in which official Yerevan has already reported casualties and 
territorial losses.
The Hayastan Alliance, which has the second largest faction in Armenia’s 
National Assembly, said in a statement issued late on Tuesday that the formation 
of a new government may be a way of resolving the current situation.
The opposition bloc led by former President Robert Kocharian put direct blame on 
Azerbaijan for “launching a large-scale attack in the eastern direction of the 
border, violating international norms and committing new war crimes” and 
described it as an urgent need “to stop the advancement of the enemy and expel 
it from Armenia’s sovereign territory through the consolidation of all-national 
forces.”
It, however, criticized the Pashinian government that “brings casualties, 
territorial losses, division, chaos.”
“A full solution to the situation requires the resignation of this government. 
Nikol Pashinian’s resignation should be followed by the consolidation of all 
capable forces, the formation of a new government, the provision of a policy for 
solving foreign and domestic problems,” the Hayastan Alliance said.
Talking to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service earlier on Tuesday, senior member of the 
ruling Civil Contract party’s parliamentary faction Eduard Aghajanian said that 
the current border escalation is a response by Azerbaijan to the failure of its 
policy to force Armenia to provide an exterritorial corridor for Baku to be 
linked with its Nakhichevan exclave through Armenia’s southern Syunik region.
“The Republic of Armenia will remain sovereign and there will be no 
[exterritorial] corridor through its sovereign territory,” Aghajanian said. “The 
[sovereign] status of the Republic of Armenia that was formed in 1991 is not 
subject to negotiation.”
EU, OSCE Call For De-Escalation Between Armenia, Azerbaijan
Charles Michel, President of the European Council, chairs the EU-Western Balkans 
Summit on 6 October 2021 in Brdo near Kranj, Slovenia
Leaders of the European Union and the Organization for Security and Cooperation 
in Europe (OSCE) have called on Armenia and Azerbaijan to put an end to ongoing 
border clashes for which both sides have accused each other.
Calling for “urgent de-escalation and full ceasefire”, Charles Michel, President 
of the European Council, described the situation in the region as “challenging”.
“The EU is committed to work with partners to overcome tensions for a prosperous 
and stable South Caucasus,” Michel wrote on Twitter.
The president of the European Council also said that he had discussions with the 
leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia – President Ilham Aliyev and Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian – “in light of today’s developments.”
Meanwhile, Swedish Foreign Minister Ann Linde, who is the current OSCE 
Chairperson-in-Office, expressed her full support for the Minsk Group Co-Chairs, 
who issued a statement over the Armenian-Azerbaijani border tensions and the 
situation in Nagorno-Karabakh earlier this week.
Ann Linde, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Sweden and OSCE Chairperson-in-Office 
(file photo)
“I share the deep concern of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs regarding reported 
incidents in the region, including those along the Armenia-Azerbaijan border. I 
express my full support for their efforts and call on the sides to de-escalate 
immediately and take steps to resolve the outstanding issues,” Linde wrote on 
Twitter.
Earlier on Tuesday Armenia asked Russia for assistance in defending against 
Azerbaijan amid renewed clashes along the border, a year after a cease-fire 
stopped an intense war over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.
As of late afternoon, Yerevan said that there were casualties – both dead and 
wounded – among Armenian soldiers, confirming that at least four Armenian 
soldiers were wounded in border clashes with Azerbaijani forces, while 12 
Armenian soldiers were taken prisoner.
Armenia’s Defense Ministry also said that two Armenian border outposts were lost 
in the battles. It said that the situation along the eastern border with 
Azerbaijan remained “extremely tense.”
Baku has confirmed that two Azerbaijani troops were wounded in the fighting.
Armenia Appeals To Russia For Protection Of Its Territorial Integrity
Armen Grigorian, secretary of Armenia’s Security Council (file photo)
Armenia appeals to Russia to protect its territorial integrity, stated Secretary 
of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigorian on Armenian Public Television 
on Tuesday amid reports of heavy fighting between Armenian and Azerbaijani armed 
forces along the border of the two South Caucasus countries.
Grigorian said that Azerbaijan’s armed forces launched military operations in 
the eastern direction of the Armenian border at 1 pm on November 16, trying to 
aggravate the situation along the entire border.
The official said that hostilities are ongoing at the moment as Armenia’s 
Ministry of Defense is “taking steps to stabilize the situation.”
“Since the attack is against the sovereign territory of Armenia, we appeal to 
the Russian Federation to protect the territorial integrity of Armenia within 
the framework of the 1997 agreement between the Republic of Armenia and the 
Russian Federation and within the framework of the logic of fulfilling mutual 
obligations under the agreement,” Grigorian underscored.
The secretary of Armenia’s Security Council said that his oral application would 
also be followed with an application in writing.
“Armenia expects Russia to provide assistance and expects that Armenia will have 
the opportunity to restore its territorial integrity,” Grigorian concluded.
Later on Tuesday Russia’s TASS news agency quoted Armenian ambassador to Moscow 
Vardan Toghanian as saying that Moscow and Yerevan are currently conducting 
consultations via military and diplomatic channels over the escalation along the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border.
Meanwhile, Armenia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs stressed that under the UN 
Charter, the republic has the right to repel the use of force against its 
territorial integrity and sovereignty ‘by all available means.’
“We call on the international community and our international partners – Russia, 
the CSTO, the co-chairmanship of the OSCE Minsk Group and the co-chairing 
countries – to respond clearly to these actions [of Azerbaijan] that undermine 
regional peace and security, and to take effective steps towards their 
prevention and the unconditional and complete withdrawal of Azerbaijani armed 
forces from the territory Republic of Armenia,” the ministry said in a statement.
Armenia is a member of the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization, 
a defense pact of former Soviet republics also including Belarus, Kazakhstan, 
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.
Armenia also has a bilateral military agreement with Russia and hosts a Russian 
military base in its territory.
After days of reported incidents along their border intensive fighting erupted 
between Armenia and Azerbaijan today, with both sides accusing each other of 
provocations.
Reports from both sides suggest the application of armored vehicles, artillery, 
mortars, and other weapons in the current fighting.
So far Baku has reported about two wounded Azerbaijani soldiers. It has also 
said that its forces have taken several Armenian soldiers prisoners during the 
fighting. Yerevan has confirmed that four Armenian soldiers were wounded during 
border fighting in the southern Armenian province of Syunik.
Yerevan has confirmed that 12 Armenian soldiers have been captured by the 
Azerbaijani military.
The Armenian Defense Ministry said the situation on the country’s eastern border 
with Azerbaijan remained “extremely tense” as of 2:30 pm.
The latest flare-up of tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan comes amid a call 
from international mediators to de-escalate the situation along the volatile 
border.
In a statement issued late on Monday, the American, Russian and French co-chairs 
of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s Minsk Group also 
urged the sides “to refrain from inflammatory rhetoric and provocative actions, 
and implement in full the commitments they undertook under the November 9 
statement and other jointly agreed [Nagorno-Karabakh] ceasefire arrangements.”
Azerbaijan Claims Armenian Soldiers Taken Prisoner In Fresh Border Fighting
An Armenian solider at an army outpost on the border with Azerbaijan (file photo)
Official Baku has claimed that Armenian soldiers have been disarmed and taken 
prisoner as a result of the latest clashes along the border between Armenia and 
Azerbaijan.
It also said two Azerbaijani soldiers were wounded after coming under intensive 
fire from the Armenian side on Tuesday.
Armenia and Azerbaijan today have accused each other of carrying out 
provocations at the border, using artillery, armored vehicles and firearms of 
different calibers.
Armenia’s Defense Ministry said that as a result of an intensive exchange of 
fire the Azerbaijani side has sustained a “loss of materiel.”
Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry, for its part, accused Armenian forces of 
“carrying out a large-scale military provocation” in the Kalbajar-Lachin area, 
which “ended in the disarmament and capture of Armenian soldiers.”
Official sources in Baku did not specify the exact number of Armenian soldiers 
who were allegedly taken prisoner.
“Units of the Armenian Armed Forces carried out a large-scale military 
provocation. In order to gain military advantage by occupying heights on the 
state border, the Armenian Armed Forces carried out a military operation at 
11:00 am on November 16,” the official statement of the Azerbaijani Defense 
Ministry reads.
The ministry claimed that “the Armenian Armed Forces, concentrating additional 
troops and military hardware at their border positions in the Basarkechar and 
Garakilsa regions of Armenia, attacked the positions of the Azerbaijani army in 
the Kalbajar and Lachin districts of Azerbaijan.”
“Considerable damage was caused to the positions of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces 
as a result of intensive fire [from the Armenian side] carried out with the use 
of firearms of different calibers and grenade launchers. According to 
preliminary data, two servicemen of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces were wounded,” 
the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said.
Official Yerevan has not confirmed the capture of Armenian servicemen yet. 
Armenia’s Defense Ministry reported about retaliatory actions of the Armenian 
Armed Forces taken at around 1 pm “in response to Azerbaijani fire and attempts 
to advance at the eastern section of the border.”
The Armenian Defense Ministry said the situation along the Armenian-Azerbaijani 
border remained tense as of 2 pm.
The latest flare-up of tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan comes amid a call 
from international mediators to de-escalate the situation along the volatile 
border.
In a statement issued late on Monday, the American, Russian and French co-chairs 
of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s Minsk Group also 
urged the sides “to refrain from inflammatory rhetoric and provocative actions, 
and implement in full the commitments they undertook under the November 9 
statement and other jointly agreed [Nagorno-Karabakh] ceasefire arrangements.”
Armenian Opposition Boycotts Parliament After Incidents Along Azerbaijan Border
Members of the opposition Hayastan and Pativ Unem factions are leaving the 
Armenian parliament’s chamber in a boycott of the regular session, November 16, 
2021
The Armenian parliament’s two opposition factions announced a boycott of a 
regular session on Tuesday, accusing the pro-government majority of scuttling 
their attempt to discuss what they view to be a more pressing issue concerning 
the current border situation.
The Hayastan and Pativ Unem factions sought immediate hearings in parliament on 
the situation along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border on Monday after Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian admitted, during a Security Council session earlier 
this day, that Azerbaijani troops had advanced into Armenian territory at one of 
the eastern sections of the un-demarcated border.
Baku denied its troops had entered Armenian territory as a result of several 
incidents reported along the borders between the two countries over the weekend.
At the same Security Council session Pashinian announced the replacement of 
Defense Minister Arshak Karapetian with Suren Papikian, a political figure who 
prior to that served as deputy prime minister in the Pashinian government.
Parliament Speaker Alen Simonian, however, did not meet the opposition’s request 
late on Monday.
In his remarks during the opening of today’s session Hayastan faction leader 
Seyran Ohanian said: “As a sign of protest the Hayastan faction will not take 
part in the workings of the regular session.”
Hayk Mamijanian, secretary of the Pativ Unem faction, said that his faction 
could not discuss any less pressing issues in the current conditions.
“The opposition factions had demanded a special meeting to get answers from the 
government about what is happening at the borders of our homeland. That process 
was foiled by the ruling majority. Instead, today we see on the agenda of the 
National Assembly an issue of [the utilization] of mercury,” he said.
Mamikanian stressed that members of the Pativ Unem faction will return to the 
chamber of plenary sessions “when issues facing our country are discussed in the 
order of their importance and priority in terms of threats to our security.”
Members of the two oppositions factions then left the chamber, while the 
session, which also has the 2022 state budget on its agenda, continued with the 
participation of only representatives of the pro-governing Civil Contract 
party’s faction.
Civil Contract holds 71 seats in the 107-member National Assembly and is in a 
position to ensure a quorum and adopt laws without the opposition factions.
Armenia Blasts ‘Double Standards’ Over Karabakh Conflict
Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan (R) at the meeting of the Foreign 
Ministers of the Eastern Partnership in Brussels,15Nov,2021
Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan has blasted the application of double 
standards and the use of “generic calls on both sides” in regards to the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict as he addressed a meeting of the EU Eastern 
Partnership’s foreign ministers in Brussels.
In his remarks at the November 15 gathering the top Armenian diplomat accused 
Azerbaijan of unleashing military aggression against the people of 
Nagorno-Karabakh last year and called on “all partners interested in a 
comprehensive settlement of the conflict to express unconditional and full 
support to the peace process with the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship.”
“I want to reiterate that Armenia is ready to reach long-lasting peace and 
stability in the South Caucasus. However, peace cannot be achieved by the good 
will of one party alone. It is difficult to imagine lasting peace in the region 
with the so-called ‘Trophy Park’ in Baku, with continued hate speech and 
xenophobia by the high officials of Azerbaijan, with continued imprisonment of 
Armenian POWs and other detainees, many cases of enforced disappearances, with 
continued infiltration and presence of Azerbaijani troops into sovereign 
territory of Armenia, the last attempt of which occurred just yesterday. As much 
as Armenia expresses its readiness for de-escalation, Azerbaijan continues 
provocations in Nagorno-Karabakh and in the Armenian-Azerbaijani borders 
inflicting casualties among civilians. As much as Armenia calls for opening of 
regional communication, Azerbaijan continues to demand a so-called ‘corridor’,” 
Mirzoyan said.
He noted that while in the beginning Azerbaijan was conditioning the release of 
Armenian prisoners of war with obtaining minefields maps, “when Armenia did 
propose to provide all maps in anticipation of the release of all captives, 
Azerbaijan stepped back, questioning the credibility of the maps.”
Mirzoyan also accused Azerbaijan of impeding access to Nagorno-Karabakh for 
international humanitarian organizations, including those that request a 
fact-finding mission to determine the state of cultural heritage.
“Generic calls on both sides under the circumstances when Armenia makes credible 
steps towards peace, while Azerbaijan continues the escalation of the situation, 
may indicate indifference and lack of commitment from our international partners.
“If you want to support us to reach stability in the region, then there is no 
other way than being frank on these issues and communicating to us your vision 
of human rights and use of force in our region without applying double 
standards. We stand ready to be a genuine partner with the European Union in 
this regard,” the Armenian foreign minister concluded.
Mediators Urge Armenia, Azerbaijan To De-Escalate Border Situation
An Armenian soldier near a military position along the eastern border between 
Armenia and Azerbaijan (file photo)
International mediators have called for an immediate de-escalation of the 
situation along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border following three days of reported 
incidents blamed by Yerevan and Baku on each other.
In a statement released late on November 15 the Co-Chairs of the Organization 
for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s Minsk Group, Andrew Schofer of the 
United States, Igor Khovaev of Russia, and Brice Roquefeuil of France, said they 
“view with deep concern recent incidents in the region, including those along 
the Armenia-Azerbaijan border.”
“The Co-Chairs call on the sides to take concrete steps to de-escalate the 
situation immediately. The Co-Chairs also urge the sides to refrain from 
inflammatory rhetoric and provocative actions, and implement in full the 
commitments they undertook under the November 9 statement and other jointly 
agreed ceasefire arrangements.
“The recent increase in tension underscores the need for a negotiated, 
comprehensive, and sustainable settlement of all remaining issues related to or 
resulting from the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The Co-Chairs urge the sides to 
build on the progress made during the joint meetings of the Foreign Ministers of 
Armenia and Azerbaijan held under the auspices of the Co-Chairs in New York and 
Paris, by continuing to engage in direct dialogue aimed at contributing to 
security, stability, and prosperity in the region,” the statement said.
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Monday accused Azerbaijani troops of 
violating the border between the two South Caucasus states and replaced his 
defense minister over the alleged incident.
Azerbaijan has denied any violation of Armenia’s borders, insisting that its 
troops are stationed in Azerbaijani territory.
“Azerbaijani servicemen are serving in the sovereign territory of Azerbaijan,” 
said Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Leyla Abdullayeva, responding to Pashinian’s 
statement.
The situation in and around Nagorno-Karabakh was also addressed during a 
telephone conversation between Russian President Vladimir Putin and French 
President Emmanuel Macron that took place on November 15, the Kremlin said.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

CivilNet: 15 Armenian soldiers killed and 12 taken prisoner as Azerbaijan launches offensive in Armenia

CIVILNET.AM

16 Nov, 2021 08:11

Azerbaijani forces fired on Armenian positions using artillery and armored vehicles on the Armenia-Azerbaijan state border in the southern Syunik region on November 16 from around 1pm, according to a statement released by the Armenian Defense Ministry. Later, parliament deputy Eduard Aghajanyan confirmed that 15 Armenian soldiers have been killed, 12 taken prisoner and four have been wounded.

CivilNet: Ceasefire resumes on Armenia-Azerbaijan border after worst fighting in a year leaves 15 Armenian soldiers dead

CIVILNET.AM

17 Nov, 2021 06:11

By Mark Dovich

Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed to a Russia-brokered ceasefire Tuesday evening, ending the deadliest single outbreak of fighting between the two countries since the end of last year’s war in and around Karabakh.

Tuesday’s clashes left at least 15 Armenian soldiers dead, 12 captured, and four wounded, according to Armenian government sources, which also said that Armenia lost two combat positions near the border.

“Under the mediation of the Russian side, an agreement was reached to cease fire at Armenia’s eastern border,” said the Armenian Defense Ministry in a statement. “The situation has relatively stabilized.”

The Azerbaijani government has neither confirmed the ceasefire nor provided a number of casualties. The Armenian Defense Ministry said that Azerbaijan suffered “heavy losses” in the course of Tuesday’s fighting.

Additionally, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said Tuesday evening that Azerbaijani forces now control 41 square kilometers of Armenian territory.

Each side has accused the other of provoking Tuesday’s clashes.

Armenian government sources said that Azerbaijani forces crossed into Armenia near Sev Lake in the southern Syunik region, while the Azerbaijani government said the fighting took place mainly in Kalbajar and Lachin, two areas that Armenia handed over to Azerbaijan as part of last year’s ceasefire agreement. (Armenians also refer to Kalbajar as Karvachar.)

In a statement, the Armenian Foreign Ministry drew attention to the ongoing presence of Azerbaijani troops near Sev Lake, where they have been stationed since May.

“This attack is a continuation of the consistent policy of the Azerbaijani side to occupy the territories of the Republic of Armenia, which began…with the infiltration of the Azerbaijani armed forces into the Syunik and Gegharkunik regions,” the statement said.

Renewed fighting comes amid breakdown of negotiations, rising tensions, and periodic clashes

The fighting followed days of rising tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Most recently, Azerbaijan set up additional border checkpoints along a key Armenian road that it partially controls.

The Goris-Kapan highway, built in Soviet times, runs along the Armenia-Azerbaijan border and crosses it several times due to the region’s difficult, mountainous geography. It is of crucial importance for Armenia’s security and economy because it provides an overland connection to Iran, a key strategic partner.

Azerbaijan has previously closed off parts of the road to Iranian truckers, sparking a crisis in Azerbaijani-Iranian relations.

On Sunday Azerbaijani soldiers advanced into Armenian territory and surrounded four Armenian military posts, according to Armenia’s National Security Council. The Azerbaijani troops reportedly retreated without incident following negotiations. The Armenian government has not stated exactly where Sunday’s incident took place.

Although last year’s ceasefire agreement ended wide-scale hostilities between Armenia and Azerbaijan, tensions remain extremely high, and clashes continue to break out periodically.

Tuesday’s fighting also comes just after the two sides marked the one year anniversary of the end of last year’s war, which left over 6,000 people dead, thousands more injured, and tens of thousands displaced.

Armenia and Azerbaijan were rumored to be preparing to mark the one year anniversary of the war’s end earlier this month by meeting in Russia to sign two key agreements on borders and transport connections.

That meeting did not take place, apparently as a result of negotiations breaking down. Regional media outlets have reported that the biggest sticking point has been the issue of control over future transport connections linking Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The 2020 ceasefire agreement signed by Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Russia stipulates that “all economic and transport connections shall be unblocked,” including an overland connection between the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhichevan (also known as Nakhijevan in Armenia) and mainland Azerbaijan via Syunik.

Azerbaijan has repeatedly referred to such a connection as a “corridor,” suggesting that the route would be under Azerbaijani control. The Armenian government, in turn, has consistently pushed back against Azerbaijan’s demands for control over the connection.

Armenia reaches out to close ally Russia

According to reports by Russian news agencies, Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke by phone with Pashinyan on Tuesday to discuss the situation along the Armenia-Azerbaijan border.

In a terse statement posted on the Kremlin website, the Russian government said Putin and Pashinyan agreed to “continue contacts.”

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu also called his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts on Tuesday to urge de-escalation, Russian media reported.

Earlier that day, the Armenian Foreign Ministry called on the Russia-led Collective Security Treaty Organization to intervene and help “remove Azerbaijani armed forces” from Armenian territory.

The CSTO is a mutual defense alliance founded in 1994 by Russia, Armenia, and four other post-Soviet states: Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan. The organization’s founding treaty commits signatories to “immediately launch the mechanism of joint consultations” when a member state is faced with a “menace to safety, stability, territorial integrity and sovereignty.”

“We are addressing Russia with a call for protecting the territorial integrity of Armenia. A written request is being prepared,” said Armen Grigoryan, the secretary of Armenia’s Security Council. So far, Russia has not publicly responded to the request.

But Stanislav Zas, the head of the CSTO, has previously said that Azerbaijan’s incursions several kilometers deep into the Armenian regions of Gegharkunik and Syunik in May do not fall under the CSTO charter on collective defense.

Russia is Armenia’s main ally and partner on the international stage and deployed about 2,000 peacekeepers to areas in and around Karabakh under the terms of last year’s Armenia-Azerbaijan ceasefire agreement.

Russia also controls a military base in Gyumri, Armenia’s second largest city, and maintains an armed presence along much of Armenia’s borders.

Pashinyan appoints new defense minister

On Monday, just a day before the clashes broke out, Pashinyan announced that he was appointing Suren Papikyan as Armenia’s new defense minister, dismissing Arshak Karapetyan, who had held the position since August.

In a speech to the Security Council, Pashinyan said that “this decision was made as a result of analyzing the developments taking place since yesterday,” referring to Sunday’s incident, when Azerbaijani troops surrounded Armenian military posts.

“The situation led me to a decision that there should be a change of the Minister of Defense,” Pashinyan added.

Papikyan is seen as a close ally of Pashinyan and previously served as the head of the Ministry of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure, but has no military experience.

Analyst Benyamin Poghosyan raised the issue of Papikyan’s appointment in a recent column for CivilNet, questioning the timing and motivation behind Pashinyan’s decision. “The reasons for the minister’s dismissal are not clear,” he said.

Poghosyan, who serves as the chairman of the Yerevan-based Center for Political and Strategic Studies, also argued that contradictory messaging from the Security Council and Defense Ministry “continues the policy of providing false information to the public, which was widespread in 2020 during the Artsakh war.”

“This practice directly undermines public confidence in official information,” he said.

“The events that took place in Armenia during the last 30 hours once again raised a number of unanswered questions for the society.”

Baku uses artillery, armored vehicles on eastern border — Armenian Defense Ministry

TASS, Russia
Nov 16 2021
The Armenian Defense Ministry argues that “as a result of intensive fire exchanges the enemy has lost some armored vehicles”

YEREVAN, November 16. /TASS/. The situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani eastern border remains strained. Azerbaijani forces are using artillery, armored vehicles and firearms of different calibers, the Armenian Defense Ministry said on Tuesday.

“As of 14:00 (13:00 Moscow time) the situation on the eastern border between Armenia and Azerbaijan remained strained. Azerbaijani forces once again provoked an attack on Armenian positions. The enemy is using artillery, armored vehicles and firearms of different caliber. The Armenian side retaliated proportionately,” the Defense Ministry’s statement reads.

The Armenian Defense Ministry argues that “as a result of intensive fire exchanges the enemy has lost some armored vehicles.”

On November 14, the Armenian Defense Ministry said that Azerbaijani forces had attempted to carry out an attack on the eastern border. An intensive fire exchange followed. After that the situation stabilized. On November 15, Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said that Azerbaijani forces had intruded into Armenia. Defense Minister Arshak Karapetyan was dismissed. Pashinyan said the latest developments on the border were the reason.

https://tass.com/world/1362061
Also at

Heavy fighting breaks out between Armenia and Azerbaijan

EurasiaNet.org
Nov 16 2021

At least 15 Armenian soldiers, and an unknown number of Azerbaijanis, have been killed in the worst fighting since last year’s war.

Joshua Kucera Nov 16, 2021


Intense fighting has broken out between Armenia and Azerbaijan, with casualties heavier than at any time since last year’s war between the two countries.

Armenian sources reported at least 15 soldiers killed and 12 taken prisoner on November 16. Azerbaijan has not acknowledged any of its soldiers killed but the Armenian Ministry of Defense reported that they had inflicted “heavy losses of personnel and materiel” on the other side.

Armenian sources reported that fighting took place on its territory near Sev Lich, the lake in the Syunik region where Azerbaijani soldiers crossed the border in May and have reportedly remained ever since. Azerbaijani sources said most of the fighting took place in the regions of Kelbajar and Lachin.

Armenia was formally appealing to Russia, on the basis of a mutual defense treaty, to come to its assistance.

“Since there has been an attack against the sovereign territory of Armenia, under the 1997 treaty we are addressing Russia with a call for protecting the territorial integrity of Armenia. A written request is being prepared,” the secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, Armen Grigoryan, said in a televised address. There was no immediate Russian response.

Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Defense said it was responding to Armenian “large-scale provocations” along a wide stretch of the border and that two Azerbaijani servicemen were wounded. The Armenian MoD responded that Baku was engaging in a “large-scale disinformation campaign” and that “it is more than obvious that it was Azerbaijan that attacked, attacking the Armenian positions using artillery and armored vehicles.”

The president of the European Union, Charles Michel, reported that he had spoken to both Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev and Armenia Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and called for and “urgent de-escalation and full ceasefire.”

The escalation took place after several days of rising tensions, which had included several exchanges of fire and other confrontations. It followed just a week after the one-year anniversary of the signing of the ceasefire that ended last year’s war, and when the two sides were reportedly close to reaching additional agreements to bolster that ceasefire.

Armenia had reportedly pulled back from signing those agreements, and Baku appeared to be trying to use force to push Yerevan into an agreement.

“Azerbaijan has demonstrated that it is prepared to inflict the final blow against Armenia. For good,” wrote Haqqin.az, a website close to Azerbaijan’s security structures, in a piece headlined “Why Did the War Start?”

“After this, Yerevan will have no alternative to return to the negotiating table,” it concluded.

But Pashinyan, his position already weakened by the precarious security situation in the country, is likely to have his hands tied even further by the heavy casualties.

The foreign ministers of the two countries met just last week in Paris, noted Olesya Vartanyan, an analyst with the International Crisis Group. “No matter what, it is very important to sustain this emerging process. Otherwise, there will be more space for tensions, escalation, or even a new war,” she wrote on Twitter.

https://eurasianet.org/heavy-fighting-breaks-out-between-armenia-and-azerbaijan

Also Read:

Armenia reports deaths in Azerbaijan border clashes
https://www.wionews.com/world/armenia-reports-deaths-in-azerbaijan-border-clashes-429823

Armenia says 15 of its soldiers died in border clashes with Azerbaijan -IFX
https://wtvbam.com/2021/11/16/armenia-says-15-of-its-soldiers-died-in-border-clashes-with-azerbaijan-ifx/

Armenia: Border clash with Azerbaijan erupts, seeks Russian support
https://www.i24news.tv/en/news/international/europe/1637076296-armenia-border-clash-with-azerbaijan-erupts-seeks-russian-support

Armenia reports deaths in Azerbaijan border clashes
https://www.bangkokpost.com/world/2216491/armenia-reports-deaths-in-azerbaijan-border-clashes

Armenians have been killed in border clashes with Azerbaijan.
https://washingtonnewsday.com/world/armenians-have-been-killed-in-border-clashes-with-azerbaijan/

Azerbaijan accuses Armenian forces of attacking Azeri army border posts
https://tass.com/world/1361995

Baku says shots were fired at Azerbaijani military from Armenia
https://tass.com/world/1361949

Baku says shots were fired at Azerbaijani military from Armenia

Armenia asks Russia for protection from Azerbaijan

Armenia and Azerbaijan halt clashes after talks with Russian military – MoD

RT – Russia Today
Nov 16 2021
The defense ministers of both Armenia and Azerbaijan have spoken to their Russian counterpart Sergey Shoigu, on Tuesday, following reports of a clash that may have endangered the year-old Nagorno-Karabakh truce brokered by Moscow.

Shoigu called on both countries to stop all activities that threaten to escalate the situation, the Russian Ministry of Defense said on Tuesday. Shortly afterward, Moscow announced that both sides had halted clashes.


Azerbaijan said it was acting in self-defense, targeting Armenian anti-tank weapons that fired on its positions over the weekend.Armenia has accused Azerbaijan of invading its territory and capturing a dozen servicemen and four positions along the border. Baku’s forces are using tanks and artillery as well, Yerevan claimed.

Russia helped mediate an end to the fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh in November 2020, which saw Azerbaijan recapture most of the disputed territory held by the Armenians since a bloody conflict in the early 1990s. The mountainous region, populated mainly by ethnic Armenians, is located inside Azerbaijan’s internationally recognized borders and has been a bone of contention between the two Transcaucasian countries since they declared independence from the Soviet Union.


 

Armenia, Azerbaijan: Yerevan Abandons Territory in Biggest Border Clash Since War

Stratfor
Nov 18 2021

Nov 16, 2021 | 20:32 GMT

What Happened: Armenia abandoned two domestic military positions in the deadliest flare-up between itself and Azerbaijan since last year’s war over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, Eurasianet reported Nov. 16. Armenian sources reported that at least 15 soldiers were killed and 12 taken prisoner, and the number of Azerbaijani casualties is unclear.
 
Why It Matters: This escalation prompted Armenia to formally appeal to Russia for military assistance under the 1997 bilateral defense treaty, and Russian troops stationed in Armenia were allegedly moved to full combat readiness. The seizure of Armenian land appears to be a long-planned Azerbaijani provocation intended to pressure Armenia into favorable terms as the two nations reportedly finalize long-awaited border and transportation agreements. In combination with Armenia’s already-precarious domestic security situation, Azerbaijan’s strategy may be effective.
 
Background: Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan claims Azerbaijani armed forces have occupied 41 square kilometers of Armenia’s territory since May as part of a pressure campaign. Azerbaijan is reportedly using the road it seized last year, which runs from Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh, as a bargaining chip to gain customs-free access to the corridor connecting the country to its Nakhchivan exclave. In February, Pashinyan averted an “attempted military coup” when military leaders called on him to resign following months of protests over his widely criticized handling of the war. Russia brokered a ceasefire between Armenia and Azerbaijan last year, which resulted in Armenia’s evacuation of most of the disputed region and the deployment of Russian peacekeepers. 

Assembly Statement on Today’s Attack on Armenia by Azerbaijan


Washington, D.C. – The Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly) has been in touch with Congressional leaders and Biden Administration officials following Azerbaijan’s recent full-scale attack upon Armenia’s southern regions. Support for legislative and Administration application of Section 907 sanctions and other measures against Azerbaijan to re-assert United States credibility and save lives is growing, for which the Assembly is grateful. Further, the continuing role of NATO-member Turkey in military actions against Armenia is a betrayal of the principles underlying the alliance. An end of the day ceasefire announced by Russia is expected to be as ineffective against Aliyev’s genocidal pattern of behavior as past ceasefires, and as the relatively small presence of Russian peacekeepers attests.

Since crossing Armenia’s borders in May 2021, the Azerbaijani military has occupied approximately 41 square kilometers of sovereign Armenian territory and continues to stage assaults in its quest to have a “corridor” run though southern Armenia to the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhichevan. Today’s attacks occurred along the narrowest part of Armenia, and are clearly designed to cut the country in two. The recent attacks resulted in the deaths of several Armenian soldiers and the capture of 12 Armenian prisoners of war.
This latest assault is in clear violation of the November 9, 2020 and January 11, 2021 ceasefire terms, which Azerbaijan has repeatedly undermined, and is in clear disregard of the U.S., French and Russian-led OSCE Minsk Group’s repeated statements, as well as UN resolutions, to resolve matters peacefully and to respect ceasefire conditions. Ironically, Turkey is supposed to be a member of the mediating Minsk Group but has openly and actively coordinated – and often led – military and diplomatic policies with the Aliyev regime. Armenia’s National Security Council Secretary met with U.S. Ambassador Lynne Tracy earlier today and emphasized the current siege as a blow to democracy.
“Azerbaijan’s escalation of violence on Armenian soil is unacceptable,” said Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ). “This increase of deadly violence against Armenia will only continue unless the OSCE Minsk Group, the State Department, and the international community take immediate and decisive diplomatic action.” Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) said that “this unprovoked attack is in direct violation of Azerbaijan and Armenia’s ceasefire agreement, and a grave reminder that the United States must be doing everything we can to deter Azerbaijan’s ongoing aggression.”

To that end, it is imperative that the Administration end the waiver to Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act, which prohibits direct U.S. aid to Azerbaijan, and to halt U.S. military assistance to the autocratic regime in Baku, which increased to over $100 million in Fiscal Year 2019.

Now is the time for the Biden Administration and Congress to take decisive action. As President Biden stated in his address to Congress last April, “We will meet the challenge…by proving that democracy is durable and strong. Autocrats will not win the future.” The Assembly calls upon the Administration to end the waiver to Section 907, support Armenia’s democracy, and strongly condemn Azerbaijan’s ongoing ceasefire violations, which continue to destabilize the South Caucasus region.


Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a non-partisan, 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.


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