​Armenia expert Richard Giragosian: Peace between Armenia, Turkey more likely than before

Aug 2021

Episode Number 66

Armenia expert Richard Giragosian: Peace between Armenia, Turkey more likely than before

On the Middle East with Andrew Parasiliti and Amberin Zaman, an Al-Monitor Podcast
Armenia expert Richard Giragosian: Peace between Armenia, Turkey more likely than before


 
00:030:26

Turkey helped its Turkic Muslim ally Azerbaijan defeat Armenia in a short and bloody war over the mainly Armenian enclave of Nagorno Karabakh last fall. A Russian brokered peace remains in place and now Turkey says it is ready to reopen its sealed borders and establish diplomatic relations with Armenia. Armenia says it too is ready to normalize ties with Turkey. Given the tragic history, the 1915 genocide of more than a million Armenians by Ottoman forces, and the recent spate of bloodshed with Armenia losing large chunks of contested territory along with others it occupied in an earlier war, the newly dovish spirit has caught the uninitiated by surprise.

Listen to the Podcast at the link below


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Armenian-Azerbaijani Border Tensions Escalate

UK – Aug 31 2021

Experts warn that the respective countries’ approaches to ending the conflict are currently irreconcilable.

Ongoing skirmishes on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border continues to contradict public statements from officials in Yerevan and Baku about their stated intentions to establish peace after last year’s war.

The border situation is particularly tense in three areas – the village of Yeraskh, bordering the Nakhichevan enclave of Azerbaijan, and the Syunik and Gegharkunik sections, where the border has remained disputed since the collapse of the Soviet Union. These became frontline zones after the territories around Karabakh were handed over to Azerbaijan following Armenia’s defeat in the autumn of 2020.  

For instance, on August 16 Armenia announced that two servicemen had been killed in near Nakhichevan and Gegharkunik after shooting from the Azerbaijani armed forces.

Baku denied this and accused the Armenian military of shelling positions around Sadarak in Nakhichevan, as well as in the Kelbajar and Gadabay regions.

Also on August 16, according to Armenian ombudsman Arman Tatoyan, Azerbaijani forces also fired in the direction of the borderline villages of Kut and Norabak in the Gegharkunik region, with locals forced to seek shelter.

The Azerbaijani military subsequently targeted the gold mine in Sotk, operated by the Russian company GeoProMining Gold. After the war, the territory located in the Gegharkunik and Kelbajar regions was divided into Armenian and Azerbaijani parts. Shootings in the area often disrupt the mine’s operation.

Then, on the morning of August 17, Azerbaijan reported shooting from Armenian territory in the same sections of the border, with President Ilham Aliyev issuing a harsh statement calling Syunik and the city of Vardenis in Gegharkunik “Azerbaijani lands”.

Experts warn that the two sides are returning to a pre-war approach to conflict resolution, which risks creating fresh conflict. For Armenia, the Karabakh conflict and the stabilisation of the situation on the border and are separate issues, with which Baku clearly disagrees.

Baku wants a sovereign corridor to its Nakhichevan enclave through the Syunik region of Armenia and to sign a peace deal that effectively ends the Karabakh conflict through Yerevan’s recognition of Azerbaijani borders. Aliyev has publicly proposed such a deal, but Armenia has not responded.

The Armenian authorities have made it clear that they are only ready for negotiations on Karabakh in the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group and disassociate the issue of stabilising the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border with this process.

The chair of the parliamentary commission on security and defence, Andranik Kocharyan, emphasised that border tensions and the wider issue of Karabakh had to be viewed separately.

“The talks on Karabakh should be held within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group, which Baku is trying to ignore,” he continued. “And the situation on the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan should be settled within the framework of the delimitation and demarcation process.”

Baku disagrees and sees Armenia’s stance as a refusal to mutually recognise the territorial integrity of the republics and begin the process of border demarcation.

“It seems that Armenia is not ready for this or is against it. In this case, we will pursue our policy accordingly,” Aliyev said during an interview with the CNN Turk TV channel.

Director of the Caucasus Institute Alexander Iskandaryan believes that the reason for the escalation on the front line is that the parties have such divergent approaches to ending the conflict.

“Azerbaijan wants peace on its own terms,” he said. “It wants to achieve documented validation of its victory, which implies opening of a corridor to Nakhichevan through the Armenian Syunik and the signing of the so-called peace treaty, which the Azerbaijani authorities can present to their society as Armenia’s recognition of the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan. For Baku, it will mean the end of Armenia’s claims over Karabakh and the end of conflict.”

This was something to which Yerevan and Moscow would not agree, he continued.

“For Yerevan, this would mean losing Karabakh and exodus of Armenians from there, which is not beneficial for Moscow either, in terms of its regional policy. After all, the presence of peacekeepers in Karabakh is necessary for its population who needs protection,” Iskandaryan concluded.

Meanwhile, the situation continues to spur domestic tensions within Armenia. Opposition leader and former president Robert Kocharyan told local TV that the escalation on the border was serving as a smokescreen for the implementation of the “scenario of planned defeat”.

He said that such provocations created a situation when the threat of a new war became clear and in which the public could easily accept the signing of “another document, another concession”


Armenia-Turkey relations showing positive signs – analysis

Aug 31 2021

Turkey and Armenia are exchanging positive statements to restore bilateral relations, Open Caucasus Media said on Monday.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Sunday said his country was ready to normalise relations with the Armenia after Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said that Turkey had been sending “positive signals” to his country and that Yerevan would respond in kind.

“Turkey can work toward gradually normalising relations with an Armenian government that states it is ready for such progress,” said on Sunday, in response to Pashinyan, who saidthat Yerevan would evaluate Turkey’s gestures for the establishment of peace in the region and respond its positive signals likewise.

“We need a constructive approach in our region. Even if there are disagreements, neighbourly relations should be developed on the basis of respect of territorial integrity and sovereignty,” Erdoğan said.

Diplomatic relations between Turkey and Armenia have been suspended since 1993 because of Armenia’s Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Azerbaijan, which Turkey sided with Baku. The Armenian-Turkish border has also remained closed, since then.

Two bilateral protocols were signed between Turkey and Armenia in Zurich in 2009, aiming towards the normalisation of relations between the two countries. The protocols were heavily criticised domestically in both countries, and were never ratified by the legislatures of either.

Beyond historical controversies, Turkey’s political and military support for Azerbaijan during last year’s Nagorno-Karabakh war that ended with Baku’s victory, also has been a factor in the worsening of Turkey-Armenia relations.

Opening the Armenia and Turkey border would benefit both countries, Richard Giragosian, the Director of the Yerevan-based think tank the Regional Studies Centre told OC Media.

For Turkey, it could help normalising it’s fractured relations with the West, Giragosian said.

“Armenia could also serve as a bridge for Turkey to leverage Armenia’s membership in the Eurasian Economic Union,’’ he said.

This also could bring economic benefits to Armenia, according to Giragosian, that would likely lead to “more formal cooperation in the key areas of customs and border security.’’

Two Iranian documentaries win at Armenian film festival

Mehr News Agency, Iran
Aug 31 2021

TEHRAN, Aug. 31 (MNA) – Two Iranian documentaries, namely ‘Kal Fatemeh’ and ‘Balora’, have won awards at Apricot Tree Ujan International Documentary Film Festival in Armenia.

Directed and produced by Abdolqader Khaledi, ‘Balora’ has won the special jury award in the short documentary section at the 7th edition of the Armenian festival.

‘Kal Fatemeh’ by Mehdi Zamanpour Kiasari, also won an award at the Apricot Tree Ujan International Documentary Film Festival. 

Kal Fatemeh is about a woman who lives on her own farm away from the village with her two sons. She runs a farm and rears cattle for a living, meeting many challenges. She grieves over her daughter’s situation who has had an unhappy past.

On October 2, 2014, the Board of Trustees of the Folk Arts Hub Foundation decided to establish the Apricot Tree International Ethnographic Film Festival. 

Apricot Tree Ujan International Documentary Film Festival was held in Armenia from August 22 to 29, 2021.

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Authorities report on progress in post-war reconstruction works in Nagorno-Karabakh

Caucasian Knot, EU
Aug 31 2021

In Stepanakert, almost 900 buildings damaged by shelling during the autumn war have been repaired; works are also underway in the Askeran, Martakert and Martuni Districts, the Ministry of Urban Development of Nagorno-Karabakh has informed.

The “Caucasian Knot” has reported that by April, residents of Nagorno-Karabakh had submitted applications about 6943 apartments and private houses completely destroyed or damaged during the 2020 autumn war. The housing issue of the families of all forced migrants who came to live in Nagorno-Karabakh will be settled within three years, the local authorities have assured.

A total of 195 construction companies are engaged in restoring the buildings destroyed by Azerbaijan’s shelling during the autumn war; the works are carried out both at the expense of budget funds and of charitable funds and organizations, Marta Danielyan, the press secretary of the above Ministry, told the “Caucasian Knot” correspondent.

According to the Ministry, more than 6500 buildings were destroyed in Nagorno-Karabakh. In Stepanakert, 892 of them have already been restored; the construction works are underway in 297 other ones, Ms Danielyan said. Overall, 112 buildings have been built in the Askeran District, and 203 other objects are under construction; 90 buildings have been restored in the Martakert District, and construction works are underway in 188 others; the Martuni District has built 256 structures, 296 other objects are under construction, Ms Danielyan has summed up.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on August 31, 2021 at 00:57 am MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

Author: Alvard GrigoryanSource: CK correspondent

Source: 
© Caucasian Knot

Azerbaijan’s support underpins Turkey’s ambitions in South Caucasus

Aug 31 2021
Columns
Burcu Ozcelik| Research fellow at University of Cambridge
Updated Aug 31, 2021 | 17:24 IST

Turkey is bolstering defence cooperation with Azerbaijan as it seeks to double down on the military success of last year’s war between Azerbaijan and Armenia. As skirmishes along the Armenian-Azerbaijan border increased in recent weeks, there was even speculation that Turkey was on the brink of forging a joint military force with Baku. Turkey helped Azerbaijan come out on top of the six-week conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region and it wants to capitalize by further boosting its influence in the South Caucasus.

Under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), Turkey has made no secret of its thirst for a grander role in swaths of the Arab Middle East, Libya and the Eastern Mediterranean. But if it pushes too far into the Caucasus, it risks antagonising Russia, which views the region as its own historical backyard.

Symbolised by the popular motto of “one nation, two states”, Turkey and Azerbaijan have held a close bond since Baku declared independence in 1991. The countries are predominantly Muslim, share ethnic and cultural similarities and are linked by strong economic interests.

A chronic, shared concern between the two is thwarting the regional ambitions of Armenia. Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic relations and a history of hostility that dates back a century.

Ties between Ankara and Baku grew deeper after Turkey threw its support behind Azerbaijan during last year’s conflict. Ankara supplied Azeri forces with armed Bayraktar TB2 drones that were used to devastating effect against Armenian troops.

The war ended with a Russia-brokered deal in November and resulted in Baku’s military victory over several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages. At least 5,000 soldiers and more than 140 civilians were killed in the fighting, which also displaced tens of thousands of people. The outcome delivered a blow to Armenia’s claims to the region that span nearly three decades.

In signs that tensions are far from over, there have been pockets of fighting along the Armenia-Azerbaijan border over the past few weeks. On August 1, the Azeri Defence Ministry said Armenian Army elements targeted its positions and Baku responded with retaliatory fire. In early August, at least three Armenian troops died and two Azeri soldiers were wounded in clashes in Azerbaijan’s Kalbajar district.

All this may have fueled reports in the Turkish media that a joint Azerbaijan-Turkey force was imminent. The speculation was later rowed back, after it turned out the source of the confusion was a poor translation of a statement by Turkish parliament speaker Mustafa Sentop at the signing ceremony of the Baku Declaration on July 28 between Turkey, Azerbaijan and Pakistan. But the prospect of a joint army had seemed plausible given that military cooperation between Ankara and Baku has steadily grown since the conflict.

Ankara is adamant that it cannot lose influence over the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement and is looking to enhance its caretaker role in the South Caucasus. In late June, the Turkish and Azeri militaries conducted joint drills in Baku that involved military personnel, tanks and drones. Similar bilateral exercises were held last year, made possible by a 2010 agreement that mandates cooperation when either country faces aggression from a third state or group of states.

Turkey and Azerbaijan signed the Shusha Declaration in July, named after the city in the Nagorno-Karabakh region that Azerbaijan now controls, affirming a joint commitment to defence cooperation, stability and prosperity in the region. A central concern lies with restructuring and modernising their armed forces.

Rumours that Turkey may be planning a military base in Azerbaijan is cause for concern for Russia, which has its own base in Armenia. Moscow has deployed 2,000 peacekeepers to the region and wants to maintain a monopoly over the balance of power there. On July 20, President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan met with Vladimir Putin in Moscow for the second time this year to discuss the post-war peace agreement and a way forward.

Russia is not the only one with an interest in how the Azerbaijan-Armenia ceasefire deal plays out. Brussels seeks the revival of the Minsk Group under the auspices of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, paving the way for the US and France (as Minsk co-chairs) to take on a larger mediating role. From their perspective, the conflict has not been resolved once and for all. European council president Charles Michel said in July during a visit to Yerevan that “the status of Nagorno-Karabakh must also be addressed.” For years, Azerbaijan expressed frustration with the stalled Minsk process and is not keen to assign it any significant role in the border demarcation process with Armenia.

In recent years, Turkish foreign policy has prioritized the creation of a medley of regional organizations, pacts and local summits as potential counterweights to established Western multilateral organizations and powerhouses like Russia and Iran. For example, the recent trilateral agreement with Pakistan and Azerbaijan or reports earlier this year of reviving Turkey-Israel relations through Azeri mediation. Turkey recently hinted at a new six-state platform to support peace in the Caucasus that would include Turkey, Azerbaijan, Russia, Iran, Georgia and Armenia. Turkey is keen to sign off on a success story in its otherwise rancorous foreign policymaking, and amid its domestic economic woes and plummeting currency.

But against the backdrop of a burgeoning bilateral military pact between Ankara and Baku, Russia and neighbouring states are hesitant to buy into its rhetoric on regional cooperation. Peripheral states have always managed their relationship with Russia carefully, wary of the consequences of a misstep. While Turkey tries to tinker with the regional balance of power, it is unclear just how much it can achieve beyond its safe-bet alliance with Azerbaijan.

In arrangement with Syndication Bureau

Burcu Ozcelik is a guest contributor. Views expressed are personal.


Armenian Cemetery Destroyed in Turkey


Aug 31 2021


08/31/2021 Turkey (International Christian Concern) –  An Armenian cemetery in Van was destroyed by bulldozers, leaving gravestones and bones upturned and strewn across the site. Someone claiming to be a landowner and desiring to set up apartments came with heavy machinery and began the demolition. The cemetery was located in Kalecik, which was an Armenian neighborhood even prior to the 1915 genocide.

Armenian cemeteries often hold significant meaning for the people group as a way to connect with their heritage and lost family members who died in the 1915 genocide. The destruction of this cemetery robs families of their ability to connect in varied ways to their past.

Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) Van MP Murat Sarısaç submitted requests to parliament, questioning the efforts being made to provide adequate security for Armenian sites.

Armenian religious and cultural sites faced increased threats to preservation. Earlier this year, a 19th-century Armenian church was posted for sale to a Turkish real estate website, claiming it was “perfect for a tourist attraction because it is in a UNESCO protected area.” In 2017, a restroom, dressing room, and car park were built on top of another Armenian cemetery in Van province. Other cemeteries also face desecration more recently.  Treasure hunters are also a common issue for historic churches that have been unable to be restored.

Armenian cemetery in Turkey bulldozed, tombstones and bones smashed

Aug 31 2021
31 August 2021

An Armenian Christian cemetery in eastern Turkey has been destroyed by bulldozers, with bones scattered across the field.

The incident occurred in mid-August in the district of Tuşba, in the mainly Kurdish province of Van, on the Iranian border.

The neighbourhood of Lezk, renamed Kalecik by the Turkish administration, was a home to many Armenians until 1915, when its residents were forced out during the genocide.

Turkish opposition MP Murat Sarısaç, a member of the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), called for a parliamentary inquiry into the matter.

Gravestones and bones were removed and scattered in the bulldozing of the Armenian cemetery in Van, eastern Turkey [Image credit: Stockholm Center for Freedom] 

“We have seen that gravestones have been destroyed and bones have been scattered,” he said in a speech in parliament on 24 August. “There have been previous incidents where churches and cemeteries were desecrated because sufficient security measures were not taken.”

Local witnesses disclosed that, in recent days, a landowner transported bulldozers to the cemetery and deliberately damaged the graves.

Gayane Gevorgyan, an Armenian living in Van, underlined the importance of such cemeteries to the Armenian diaspora.

“Many descendants of Armenians who were victims of the atrocities and forced deportations carried out in 1915 search for the remains of their families in these cemeteries,” she said. “They commemorate their lost ones in these cemeteries, but they have been robbed of that.”

The desecration of the Armenian cemetery is the latest in a series of episodes in Turkey of disrespect for Christian cultural heritage.

In January 2021, an ancient Armenian church in Bursa was expropriated and put up for sale online. In 2020 the conversions of the ancient Christian basilicas of St Sophia and Chora into mosques, which had been museums in the early 20th century under Ataturk’s rule, were completed.

These decisions follow President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s “nationalism and Islam” policy. In both basilicas the Islamic authorities have used a white curtain to cover any frescoes and icons which would reveal the buildings’ Christian roots.

Moscow calls on Baku to release all Armenian prisoners without any conditions — Lavrov

TASS, Russia
Aug 31 2021
It would be an important humanitarian step, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov stressed

MOSCOW, August 31. /TASS/. Russia calls on the Azerbaijani side to release all Armenian prisoners without any conditions, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Tuesday after talks with his Armenian counterpart, Ararat Mirzoyan.

Provision eight of the document envisages an exchange of prisoners in the all-for-all format. Armenia demands Azerbaijan released all Armenian nationals it holds. However, Azerbaijan claims that all Armenians who were taken prisoner during the hostilities in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone last autumn have been released and it continues to keep only “terrorists and saboteurs”.”We are sending this signal [concerning an all-for-all swap] to the Azerbaijani colleagues. We call on them to release everyone without any conditions,” he said, adding that this move would be a “landmark measure for trust, which is now lacking.”

“And, naturally, it would be an important humanitarian step,” he noted. “That is why we will continue to hold on to these positions, however, the final position does not depend on us.”

He stressed that Moscow has been sticking to this position in bilateral contacts with Baku, including at the top level. “We support any measures of trust, not only this one, but also a reciprocal measure when Armenia shared the mine location map,” Lavrov said. “We think that such a reciprocal step can be made today, not necessarily linking one step to another but simply in the spirit of good will. A step toward the partner, the neighbor, with whom you will continue to live on the same soil and breathe the same air. We will do our best to promote it.”

Renewed clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted on September 27, 2020, with intense battles raging in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. On November 9, 2020, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a joint statement on a complete ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Armenia ready to step up cooperation with Russia, top diplomat says

TASS, Russia
Aug 31 2021
According to Ararat Mirzoyan, Yerevan’s willingness to deepen relations with Russia is “fully reflected in the program of the government that was formed following early parliamentary elections”

MOSCOW, August 31. /TASS/. Armenia is ready to deepen strategic relations with Russia, which is Yerevan’s chief military-political ally and economic partner, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said on Tuesday at a meeting with Russia’s top diplomat Sergey Lavrov in Moscow.

“This is my first foreign trip as Armenia’s foreign minister. And this is hardly surprising. Russia is Armenia’s military-political ally and chief economic partner. In this connection, I would like to reaffirm Armenia’s willingness to continue to build its relations with Russia based on the treaty on friendship, cooperation and mutual assistance of 1997 and the declaration on allied interaction,” he said.

According to Mirzoyan, Yerevan’s willingness to deepen relations with Russia is “fully reflected in the program of the government that was formed following early parliamentary elections.”

In the new program of the Cabinet, the team of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan highlighted the importance of deepening strategic relations with Moscow and continuing cooperation within the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) and the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).

Mirzoyan was appointed Armenia’s new Foreign Minister on August 19. Prior to that, he was the speaker of the Armenian parliament.