RFE/RL Armenian Report – 08/12/2022

                                        Friday, 


Aliyev Again Rules Out Status For Karabakh Armenians


Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev (file photo).


Speaking on national television on Friday, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
again ruled out any status for ethnic Armenians living in Karabakh, saying that 
they will enjoy the same rights as other citizens of Azerbaijan.

Aliyev also reasserted Baku’s right to conduct military operations in Karabakh 
similar to the one its armed forces conducted in early August along the Lachin 
corridor with the use of drones, mortars and grenade launchers.

Ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh said two ethnic Armenian 
soldiers were killed and 19 others were wounded in the August 3 attack by 
Azerbaijani forces that prompted calls from the international community for 
de-escalation in the volatile region.

Azerbaijan claimed it had taken retributive action for the killing of an 
Azerbaijani servicemen by “Armenian terrorists.”

“Armenians living in Karabakh should take the right steps. They must understand 
that their future depends on their integration into Azerbaijani society. We live 
in reality. From the geographical, economic and historical points of view 
Karabakh is an inseparable part of Azerbaijan,” Aliyev told AzTV.

The Azerbaijani leader claimed that those who populistically talk about some 
status or independence for Armenians in Karabakh are “the main enemies of the 
Armenian people.”

“Because the Armenians living in Karabakh will not have any status, independence 
or advantages. They will live like all citizens of Azerbaijan. Their rights will 
be protected the way the rights of Azerbaijani citizens and peoples living [in 
Azerbaijan] are protected,” Aliyev said.

In March, Azerbaijan presented Armenia with five elements which it wants to be 
at the heart of a peace treaty to be signed by the two South Caucasus nations 
that fought a bloody six-week war over Nagorno-Karabakh in the fall of 2020.

The elements include a mutual recognition of each other’s territorial integrity. 
The Armenian government, in principle, agreed to the elements, but said they 
should be complemented by other issues relating to the future status of 
Nagorno-Karabakh and the security of its population.

In the interview to national television Aliyev also claimed that hundreds of 
Armenian soldiers were withdrawn from Karabakh after Azerbaijan’s military 
operation on August 3. He stressed that Azerbaijan wants a full withdrawal of 
Armenian armed units from Karabakh. “It is Armenia’s commitment. It is reflected 
in the act of surrender signed by Armenia on November 10, 2020,” Aliyev claimed.

Speaking at a weekly cabinet meeting in Yerevan on August 4, Armenian Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian stressed that there was no serviceman of the Republic 
of Armenia in the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Armenian side, however, does not share the view that the Moscow-brokered 
ceasefire that provided for the deployment of about 2,000 Russian peacekeepers 
in the region also stipulates that local Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh should 
disarm.

In his interview Aliyev also confirmed that the few remaining Armenian residents 
of the town of Lachin and the villages of Sus and Zabux (Aghavno) situated along 
the Lachin corridor will leave by the end of the month as a new route for the 
corridor linking Karabakh with Armenia is due to be put into use.

Aliyev claimed that Armenians lived in the villages illegally after their 
occupation by ethnic Armenian forces in the early 1990s and, therefore, he 
warned that those Armenians who will choose to stay might be treated like war 
criminals under the Geneva conventions.

“The occupying country cannot carry out illegal settlement of the occupied 
lands. This is a war crime. Perhaps the Armenians from Syria and Lebanon living 
there do not know this, but the leadership of Armenia is well aware of that. We 
hear news coming from there that someone says they will stay and will not leave. 
It is their business, but they are war criminals. They should not test our 
patience. Let them leave by their own will, we don’t care where they go,” the 
Azerbaijani president said.



ICG: Baku Pursues Three Goals It Hopes Will Pressure Armenia To Capitulate In 
Negotiations

        • Heghine Buniatian

Azerbaijani military trucks are moving along the Lachin corridor near 
Nagorno-Karabakh in the presence of Russian peacekeepers deployed there as part 
of the Moscow-brokered 2020 ceasefire agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia 
(file photo).


By escalating the situation in and around Nagorno-Karabakh Azerbaijan pursues 
three goals that it wants to achieve either by force or the threat of force, 
which it hopes will pressure Armenia to capitulate in negotiations, an 
international think tank says in its latest report on the region.

In its report titled “Warding Off Renewed War in Nagorno-Karabakh” that was 
published this week the International Crisis Group (ICG) goes on to list what it 
views as these three goals that have to do with the overland connection between 
Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia known as the Lachin corridor, the withdrawal of 
Armenian troops from the region as well as a treaty with Armenia to end the 
conflict that would be to Azerbaijan’s advantage.

The report quotes an unnamed Azerbaijani official as saying that “the Armenian 
side is trying to delay the commissioning of the new road this year, thereby 
purposely delaying the handover of the city of Lachin and a number of villages 
to Azerbaijan.”

Azerbaijan’s second grievance, according to ICG experts, relates to what Baku 
says is Armenia’s failure to withdraw forces from Nagorno-Karabakh, as the 
ceasefire says it must do. “Yerevan says it has done so. The issue, it says, is 
Azerbaijan’s concern that Nagorno-Karabakh’s de facto authorities retain an 
armed force. Baku argues that this force is illegal, demanding that Russian 
peacekeepers disarm it, while Armenia and the de facto authorities say its 
disarmament was never part of the ceasefire deal,” the report says.

“Baku seized upon comments Armen Grigoryan, Armenia’s Security Council 
secretary, made in an interview in mid-July that Armenia would withdraw forces 
by September as evidence of its claims. Yerevan has since furiously tried to 
walk back words it says were taken out of context,” writes the ICG, noting that 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian reiterated on August 4 that all Armenian 
armed forces have left Nagorno-Karabakh.

An Azerbaijani military official told the ICG that Baku will press ahead with 
operations until the area is fully demilitarized.

The report says that, thirdly, Baku appears keen to proceed to talks over a 
treaty that it hopes will end the conflict to its advantage. Although in April 
the Azerbaijani and Armenian leaders in Brussels declared their readiness to 
start talks on such an agreement, Azerbaijan has voiced frustration that 
subsequent diplomacy has moved too slowly, the authors of the report note.

An Azerbaijani official alleged that Armenian officials are purposely delaying 
talks. “They think that, by prolonging the negotiations, they can wait for the 
geopolitical situation to change in their favor,” the official quoted by the ICG 
said.

For their part, officials in Yerevan blame Baku, saying it is Azerbaijani 
officials that are “dragging their feet in EU-mediated talks and hoping to take 
advantage of the world’s focus on Russia’s war in Ukraine,” the authors of the 
report say.

“From a military standpoint, Armenia and de facto authorities in 
Nagorno-Karabakh view Baku’s seizure of Farukh (Parukh) in March, as well as 
positions held by the de facto Nagorno-Karabakh forces near the Lachin corridor 
and along the front lines in the entity’s north and north west, as an attempt to 
gain high ground and, thus, strategic advantage,” the ICG notes.

The authors of the report wonder whether Russian peacekeepers can deter 
Azerbaijan and enforce the ceasefire, noting that since early May, they have 
been conducting daily patrols on Sarybaba heights close to the Lachin corridor. 
“The patrols stopped a couple of days before the Azerbaijani advances, however, 
for reasons that are unclear,” the report says.

A senior de facto official in Stepanakert quoted by the ICG said the 
peacekeepers often feel powerless. “Everyone understands that Russia is weaker 
than ever before in the international arena,” the de facto representative said, 
according to the report.

“The clashes have once again highlighted the challenges faced by the Russian 
peacekeeping mission without a clear mandate for how it can engage beyond its 
monitoring role – a problem made worse by Russia’s loss of standing following 
its invasion of Ukraine,” the ICG writes.

In a 2021 report, the ICG called on the sides to hold talks on clarifying the 
peacekeepers’ role. “They appear increasingly unlikely to do so, particularly 
amid increasing criticism of the mission by both Armenia and Azerbaijan. Such 
frustration risks undermining the peacekeepers’ ability to carry out their 
existing mandate of observing the ceasefire in the conflict zone. If and when 
the time becomes ripe, international mediators must urge the sides to revisit 
this issue, which will likely come to a head in any case in 2025 when Baku and 
Yerevan must give their assent to the mission’s continuation,” the report says.

According to ICG experts, “most importantly, Western capitals and Moscow should 
try to ensure that their standoff over Ukraine does not bleed into mediation 
efforts in Nagorno-Karabakh.”

“Even distracted, Moscow pays more attention to Armenia and Azerbaijan than does 
Brussels or Washington. It remains the only country that has been willing to 
dispatch forces to the region and it remains a key trade partner of both 
countries. Working with Moscow, distasteful as it may be in European capitals, 
improves the odds of bringing peace to the South Caucasus,” the ICG says.

The group’s experts conclude that “concerted diplomacy by all outside actors 
might yet avert a return to war and keep nascent talks about an eventual peace 
settlement and new trade routes on track.”



Iran Appoints Consul In Southern Armenian Town

        • Naira Nalbandian

A general view of the town of Kapan in southern Armenia (file photo).


Iran has appointed a consul general to the town of Kapan in southern Armenia, 
the Islamic Republic’s embassy in Yerevan told the Armenian state-run Armenpress 
news agency.

Armenian news website News.am, quoting Robert Beglarian, an ethnic Armenian 
lawmaker in Iran’s parliament, reported on August 11 that the appointed consul 
general, Abedin Varamin, had already taken office and held meetings with 
officials in Yerevan.

Tehran made the decision to open a consulate general in Kapan, a strategic town 
in Armenia’s Syunik province bordering Iran, last December. Officially the 
consulate is likely to open later this year.

Shirak Torosian, a pro-government lawmaker who is a member of the Armenia-Iran 
friendship group in the Armenian parliament, described the decision as “another 
clear message about Tehran’s red lines in the region.”

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi reassured Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian in an August 11 phone call about his country’s opposition to any 
attempt to alter borders in the region.

The reassurance came amid continued statements from Baku that Armenia must 
provide Azerbaijan with an extraterritorial land corridor via Syunik to its 
western Nakhichevan exclave under the terms of the Russia-brokered ceasefire 
that put an end to a deadly six-week Armenian-Azerbaijani war over 
Nagorno-Karabakh in November 2020.

Armenia publicly supports the idea of unblocking transport links in the region, 
but insists that it should maintain sovereignty over all transit roads in its 
territory, including in Syunik.

“In Iran’s case it is also a matter of national security,” Torosian told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Friday.

“Opening a consulate general in Kapan means that they consider Syunik to be an 
important region for Iran in terms of protecting the interests of Iranian 
citizens and protecting the interests of the Iranian state in general,” he added.

The Armenian lawmaker said that Iran’s consulate general in Kapan also means 
that Tehran’s repeated statements against geopolitical changes in the region 
“now become visible.”

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned against attempts to block 
Armenia’s border with his country when he held separate meetings with Turkish 
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Tehran 
last month.

Under the 2020 ceasefire agreement in Nagorno-Karabakh, Russia, which protects 
Armenia’s borders with Iran and Turkey, is to oversee the security of the 
transport links between Azerbaijan and its western exclave passing through 
Armenian territory.

Images of Russian checkpoints set up along several roads in Syunik that appeared 
on the Internet earlier this week fueled speculations among Armenians about an 
imminent deal on the transport corridor. But Russia’s Federal Security Service, 
which is in charge of the protection of Armenia’s state frontier, said that the 
stepped-up security measures were due to increased drug trafficking and other 
illegal cross-border activities in the area.



Four Killed In Traffic Collision In Karabakh Involving Russian Peacekeepers’ 
Driver


The scene of the car crash on the Stepanakert-Askeran highway, Nagorno-Karabakh, 
.


Four people have been killed in a major traffic collision in Nagorno-Karabakh 
where a vehicle operated by a driver of the Russian peacekeeping contingent 
deployed in the region collided with another car.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian authorities said the apparent accident 
occurred along the Stepanakert-Askeran highway on Friday morning.

They said the 30-year-old driver of the Russian peacekeeping contingent, who was 
identified only by his initials, I. Y., drove a full-size SUV, Haval H9, that 
collided with a compact Lada sedan VAZ-2107.

The Lada’s driver, who was identified by the local police as a 26-year-old 
resident of the village of Sarushen in Nagorno-Karabakh’s Askeran district, 
reportedly suffered bone fractures and bruising of the right lung and was taken 
to hospital, while his four passengers – all women from the same district aged 
from 50 to 56 – were killed on the spot.

No information about the condition of the Haval H9 driver was made available 
immediately.

Local investigators are working on the scene, Nagorno-Karabakh’s authorities 
said.

Russia deploys nearly 2,000 peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh after brokering a 
ceasefire between Armenia and Azerbaijan in November 2020 to end a deadly 
six-week war over the region.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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Analysts treat shootouts in Nagorno-Karabakh after "Retribution" as insignificant

Caucasian Knot
Aug 11 2022
After the Azerbaijani operation "Retribution" conducted in the Karabakh conflict zone, there were no active hostilities; shootouts were local in nature, analysts have pointed out, however, not ruling out a possible further conflict escalation.

The "Caucasian Knot" has reported that on August 3, Azerbaijan announced the "Retribution" operation to be held in Nagorno-Karabakh after the death of an Azerbaijani soldier. As a result of the fighting, Azerbaijan occupied the Sarybaba heights in the Shusha District and Gyrkhgyz heights in the Khodjaly District; and on August 6, it announced the capture of the strategic Buzdukh height. On August 8, Baku announced 10 shelling attacks committed against Azeri militaries during the past 24 hours, but Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh refuted this information.

Azerbaijan is not interested in escalation, Azad Isazade, a military expert, believes.

"After the Azerbaijani Army has occupied a number of important dominant heights, there is no reason for Baku to preserve the military tension," he has stated.

In his opinion, the operation was a warning that Azerbaijan is ready to act in response to threats, despite the presence of Russian peacemakers in the region.

Azerbaijan launched strikes with precision weapons on enemy troops and showed its commitment to inflict damage on Armenian militaries anywhere in Karabakh, Mr Isazade has concluded.

Telman Abilov, the head of the NGO "Military Lawyers", believes that the shootouts of recent days "were provoked by Armenia" in the hope of a reaction from the world community.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on at 07:56 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

See earlier reports:
Nagorno-Karabakh accuses Azerbaijan of shelling attacks, Armenian soldier wounded on contact line, Analysts treat Nagorno-Karabakh's status as reason for conflict escalation.

Author: Faik Medjid Source: СK correspondent
Источник:
© Кавказский Узел

Wording of agreement on Nagorno-Karabakh gives rise to conflict escalation

Caucasian Knot
Aug 11 2022
By having built a section of the road bypassing the Lachin Corridor, Azerbaijan, did not violate the terms of the agreement on Nagorno-Karabakh, while the escalation of the Karabakh conflict was provoked by the Armenian party, Russian and Azerbaijani analysts have pointed out. Armenian authorities are trying to circumvent the agreements, taking advantage of the ambiguous wording thereof, Armenian political scientists have pointed out.

The "Caucasian Knot" has reported that on August 3, Baku announced the conduct of the "Retribution" operation in Karabakh after the death of an Azerbaijani soldier. The Azerbaijani Army has occupied the Sarybaba heights in the Shusha District and Gyrkhgyz heights in the Khodjaly District; and on August 6, it took control over the strategic height of Buzdukh.

The conflict escalation occurred amid the construction of an alternative road to the Lachin Corridor, built according to the Aliev-Pashinyan-Putin agreement.

Alexei Malashenko, an economist, believes that it was an Armenia's military provocation. He is sure that the Lachin Corridor is "the Azerbaijan's territory."

Mekhman Aliev, the director of the "Turan" News Agency, thinks that Armenia's claims are unjustified. According to his version, Baku "continues ensuring the security of Armenia's transport communication with the part of Karabakh, where the Armenian population lives."

In the opinion of Suren Surenyants, a political analyst, the tripartite agreement contains some unclear wordings.

"Russia deliberately compiled it with contradictions. For example, one of the points says about the need to withdraw Armenian armed units. A question arises: does this apply to Armenia's units or the units by ethnicity?" he has asked.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on at 06:03 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

See earlier reports:
Analysts treat shootouts in Nagorno-Karabakh after "Retribution" as insignificant, Baku analysts assess importance of Mount Buzdukh capture for Azerbaijan, Azerbaijani MoD did not confirm information about withdrawal of troops from heights in Karabakh.

Author: Oleg Krasnov, Faik Medjid, Tigran Petrosyan Source: СK correspondents
Источник:

© Кавказский Узел

Russian MFA rejects criticism of peacekeepers in Karabakh conflict zone

Caucasian Knot
Aug 11 2022
Criticism of the Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh is unjustified, as the peacekeepers are helping to stabilize the situation, states Ivan Nechaev, a spokesperson for the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA). The official has added that the issue of the Lachin corridor should be resolved within the framework of the trilateral agreement signed by Vladimir Putin, Ilham Aliev, and Nikol Pashinyan.

The “Caucasian Knot” has reported that on August 3, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) of Azerbaijan announced the conduct of the “Retribution” operation in Nagorno-Karabakh in response to the murder of a military man. Baku demanded the immediate withdrawal of the Armenian troops from Karabakh. Nikol Pashinyan stated the need to clarify the functions of the Russian peacekeepers in Karabakh.

The escalation took place amid the construction of an alternative road to the Lachin corridor, which was created according to the trilateral agreement signed by Vladimir Putin, Ilham Aliev, and Nikol Pashinyan. The Nagorno-Karabakh authorities informed residents of the communities of Akhavno, Sous, and Berdzor that they were to leave their houses by August 25, since the Lachin corridor would be handed over to Azerbaijan. Today, Baku has reported that the construction of the road along the new route of the Lachin corridor has been completed.

The “Caucasian Knot” has reported that the wording of the trilateral agreement makes it possible to interpret it in a broad way. Azerbaijan, having built a section of the road bypassing the Lachin corridor, did not violate the terms of the agreement on Karabakh, and if the route of the Lachin corridor is changed, it will remain under the protection of the Russian peacekeepers, economist and geographer Alexei Gunya emphasizes.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on at 03:01 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

See earlier reports:
Azerbaijan announces completion of road bypassing Lachin, Wording of agreement on Nagorno-Karabakh gives rise to conflict escalation, Demand to resettle outrages Akhavno villagers.

Source: Caucasian Knot
Источник:
© Кавказский Узел

CivilNet: Russia to organize high-level talks with Armenia, Azerbaijan

CIVILNET.AM

11 Aug, 2022 10:08

  • Russia’s Foreign Ministry said it is planning to organize high-level talks with Armenian and Azerbaijani officials by the end of the month.
  • Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi reiterated that Iran will oppose any attempts to alter its borders in the Caucasus in a phone call with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.
  • Armenia’s Foreign Ministry denied news in the Turkish press saying that Armenia and Turkey’s special envoys for normalization talks will meet again next month.
  • The Armenian government will allocate over $6.5 million to complete construction on three roads.
  • The authorities in Karabakh said the situation along the line of contact remains “relatively stable,” despite “certain tensions.”

Credits: Ruptly

Armenpress: Statistical Committee releases demographic data

Statistical Committee releases demographic data

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 09:21,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 11, ARMENPRESS. 2,961,900 people live in Armenia as of July 1, 2022, according to the Statistical Committee.

1,564,500 are women and 1,397,400 are men.

The urban population is 1,890,200 and the rural population is 1,071,700.

The current figures are based on the 2011 census.

The sex ratio at birth for January-June 2022 is 111,3 boys for 100 girls against the previous year’s 108.0.

In the first half of 2022, 7,926 marriages and 2,207 divorces were recorded.

16,511 people were born and 14,679 people died. Natural increase stood at 1,832.

63,1% of the population are persons 16-62 of age who are capable of employment, while 21,4% are below the age of employment (up to 15), and 15,5% are seniors aged 63 and above.

Armenian PM discusses regional developments and security with Iranian President

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 09:47,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 11, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan held a phone conversation with President of Iran Ebrahim Raisi, the Prime Minister’s Office said.

PM Pashinyan and President Raisi discussed issues related to regional developments and security challenges, PM Pashinyan’s office said in a readout of the call.

The Armenian PM presented details about the recent border incidents between Armenia and Azerbaijan. In the context of establishing stability and peace in the region, PM Pashinyan underscored the importance of full implementation of the 9 November 2020, 11 January and 26 November, 2021 trilateral agreements.

Speaking on the tense incidents taking place in South Caucasus in the recent days, the Iranian President cited Supreme Leader of Iran Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s statement during the recent meeting with the leaders of Russia and Turkey that Iran is sensitive in the matter of its borders in the Caucasian region and will counter any attempt to change them.

The sides exchanged ideas also about bilateral ties and emphasized the importance of deepening relations.

PM Pashinyan expressed satisfaction over the development of Armenian-Iranian relations and said that Armenia is ready to maximally promote transit of goods between the two countries and develop cooperation in infrastructure sector, including in roads, energy and other directions.

President Raisi described the relations between Armenia and Iran as historic and deep and underscored the need to raise the level of stable Armenian-Iranian economic cooperation.

No significant ceasefire violations or incidents recorded on line of contact – Artsakh Defense Army

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 09:48,

STEPANAKERT, AUGUST 11, ARMENPRESS. The situation on the line of contact was relatively stable despite the certain remaining tension overnight August 10-11 and as of 09:00, the Defense Army of Artsakh said in a statement.

No significant ceasefire violations or incidents were recorded, it added.

“Measures continue being taken together with the Russian peacekeeping contingent to further stabilize the situation.”

Azerbaijan hasn’t abandoned corridor aspirations despite building new road through Iran to Nakhijevan, experts warn

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 10:05,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 11, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov’s statement on connecting Azerbaijan with Nakhijevan through Iranian territory doesn’t at all mean that Azerbaijan is abandoning its aspirations to get a corridor through Armenian territory, warns expert on Azerbaijan Taron Hovhannisyan.

“Azerbaijan anyhow has a road to Nakhijevan through Iranian territory, now Azerbaijan is trying to build a shortcut from the southern regions of Artsakh it occupied during the war. The Azerbaijani authorities had announced about this very early on, there is simply another issue here, that they are trying to use this to exert additional pressure on Armenia by saying that the transit road will pass through Iranian territory and Armenia will be sidelined from regional projects, and they are attempting to exert additional pressure on Armenia to agree in the issue of the so-called “Zangezur Corridor”,” Hovhannisyan said.

Hovhannisyan reminded that the Azerbaijani FM Bayramov threatened Armenia in one of his recent interviews to the Turkish Anadolu news agency, saying that “the corridor will be opened whether Armenia wants it or not”.

“The Azerbaijani side hasn’t abandoned this idea, and this is first of all a political goal for them, and also for Turkey. It is another matter that they are trying to make diversification and gain a shorter road through Iranian territory and another road through Armenia’s territory,” Hovhannisyan added.

Historian and Orientalist Armen Petrosyan told ARMENPRESS that Azerbaijan had and still has the only connection with Nakhijevan through Iranian territory, while the recent agreements are simply about the construction of a new road from territories of Artsakh that are now under Azerbaijani control after the war.

“There is nothing new here, they are simply trying to develop more affordable and beneficial connections. And they are trying to use this to blackmail and pressure Armenia. Meaning, they say that if Armenia doesn’t provide the corridor-logic road to Azerbaijan then it will be sidelined from the process of unblocking of regional connections and will remain isolated and Azerbaijan will continue its connection with the Iranian road. There is no change in Azerbaijan’s rhetoric and they still continue to demand from Armenia unblocking in the logic of corridor,” Petrosyan said.