Iran Seeks Trade Expansion in Armenia, Other South Caucasus States

May 31 2022

In recent months, Iran has engaged in active foreign policy in the South Caucasus to push its geo-economic interests forward.

Iran’s Finance and Economic Minister headed a delegation to Yerevan in April to meet Armenian officials and negotiate with the Armenian side over trade. The Iranian side argued that there is still great potential for expansion of bilateral cooperation and increasing annual trade between both sides to $1 billion.

The minister said that the Iranian side attaches great importance not only to the development of trade with Armenia but also considers it as a “gateway” to the markets of Russia and other Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) member countries.

RFE?RL Armenian Report – 06/01/2022

                                        Wednesday, June 1, 2022
EU Head Reacts To Armenian-Azeri ‘Tensions’
June 01, 2022
Greece - European Council President Charles Michel speaks during an event in 
Alexandroupolis, May 3, 2022.
European Council President Charles Michel seemed to confirm late on Tuesday 
Armenia’s assertions that it has not agreed to open a permanent land corridor 
that will connect Azerbaijan to its Nakhichevan exclave.
Michel was also understood to deny advocating Nagorno-Karabakh’s return under 
Azerbaijani rule during his trilateral meeting with Armenian Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev held in Brussels on May 
22.
Aliyev said after the summit that he and Pashinian agreed to open a “Zangezur 
corridor” that will consist of a road and railway connecting Nakhichevan to the 
rest of Azerbaijan. He had demanded earlier that people and cargo using them be 
exempt from Armenian border controls.
Pashinian and other Armenian officials denied Aliyev’s claim, saying that 
Yerevan will not open any extraterritorial corridors. They insisted that the two 
sides reached understandings only on conventional transport links.
“Both parties confirmed [at Brussels] there were no extraterritorial claims with 
regard to future transport infrastructure. Speculation to the contrary is 
regrettable,” Michel’s spokesman, Barend Leyts, said in a statement.
Commenting on “the past days' tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” Leyts 
also sought to clarify Michel’s remarks made right after the Brussels talks.
“President Michel's statement on outcomes of the leaders meeting on 22 May 
should not be interpreted as favoring a predetermined outcome of discussions 
either way,” he said.
The European Union’s top official said early on May 23 that “the rights and 
security of the ethnic Armenian population in Karabakh” should also be addressed 
during upcoming negotiations on an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty.
Armenian opposition leaders and Karabakh’s leadership denounced the remark. They 
accused Michel of undermining the Karabakh Armenians’ right to 
self-determination by portraying them as an ethnic minority not eligible for 
independent statehood.
“In President Michel's opinion, all core issues that had led to the first 
Nagorno-Karabakh war as well as to the renewed hostilities in 2020 will need to 
be addressed by all stakeholders to create conditions for lasting and equitable 
peace,” stressed Leyts.
Late last week, Aliyev warned the Armenian side against insisting on an 
agreement on Karabakh’s status. He said Baku could respond by laying claim to 
Armenian territory. The Armenian Foreign Ministry denounced the threat.
Saudi Arabia, Armenia Again Signal Warming Ties
June 01, 2022
Saudi Arabia - Saudi and Armenian national flags fly at Riyad airport during the 
arrival of Armenian President Armen Sarkissian, October 27, 2021.
Armenia voiced support on Wednesday for Saudi Arabia’s bid to host the Expo 2030 
world fair in another sign of rapprochement between the two states that have no 
diplomatic relations.
Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan announced the endorsement in a phone call with 
Saudi Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Adel al-Jubeir.
The Armenian Foreign Ministry said the two men discussed “prospects for the 
development of relations” between their nations and stressed the importance of 
promoting bilateral trade and “investment projects.”
“Minister Mirzoyan informed his interlocutor that Armenia supports Saudi 
Arabia's application to hold World Expo 2030 in Riyadh,” the ministry added in a 
statement.
Mirzoyan made that clear one week after Russia, Armenia’s closest ally, withdrew 
its formal request to host the global event. Moscow said the selection process 
cannot be fair because of the West’s efforts to isolate it on the world stage 
over the war in Ukraine.
Saudi Arabia has for decades refused to establish diplomatic relations with 
Armenia due to its conflict with Muslim Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh. The 
oil-rich kingdom signaled a change in that policy after its relations with 
Armenia’s arch-foe and Azerbaijan’s ally Turkey deteriorated significantly 
several years ago.
Saudi Arabia - Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman talks to Armenian 
President Armen Sarkissian during the Future Investment Initiative forum in 
Riyadh, October 26, 2021.
The policy change was highlighted last October by then Armenian President Armen 
Sarkissian’s visit to Riyadh. Sarkissian sat next to Saudi Arabia’s de facto 
ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, at the opening ceremony of an 
international conference held there.
Riyadh signaled more overtures to Yerevan in February this year when Saudi 
Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud and Mirzoyan held talks on the 
sidelines of the Munich Security Conference in Germany.
It was the first-ever face-to-face meeting of the top diplomats of the two 
countries. The Saudi Foreign Ministry said they “reviewed bilateral relations in 
various fields” and explored “opportunities to enhance bilateral coordination.”
It remains unclear whether the kingdom is now ready for a full normalization of 
Saudi-Armenian relations.
Aliyev, Pashinian Brief Putin On Brussels Talks
June 01, 2022
Russia - Russian President Vladimir Putin, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev meet in Sochi, November 26, 
2021.
In separate phone calls, the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan have briefed 
Russian President Vladimir Putin on the results of their latest meeting held in 
Brussels on May 22.
According the Kremlin, Putin and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev spoke on 
Tuesday “at the initiative of the Azerbaijani side.” The Russian leader phoned 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Wednesday.
The Kremlin’s readouts of the calls said they presented to Putin details of 
their trilateral meeting in Brussels with European Council President Charles 
Michel. It was the second Armenian-Azerbaijani summit hosted by Michel in less 
than two months.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov spoke with his Armenian and Azerbaijani 
counterparts the day after the May 22 summit. The Russian Foreign Ministry 
afterwards again criticized the European Union’s mediation efforts.
The ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, accused the EU of trying to “wedge” 
into the implementation of Armenian-Azerbaijani agreements brokered by Moscow 
earlier.
The agreements call for the demarcation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and 
the opening of transport links between the two South Caucasus states. Putin 
discussed their implementation with Aliyev and Pashinian.
An Armenian government statement said Putin welcomed the first session of an 
Armenian-Azerbaijani commission on the demarcation held on the border on May 24. 
It reaffirmed that the next session of the commission will be held in Moscow but 
gave no dates.
The statement said Putin and Pashinian agreed on the need to step up activities 
of a separate Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani task force dealing with practical 
modalities of the transport links. It said they also discussed the possibility 
of kick-starting the work of the OSCE Minsk Group on Nagorno-Karabakh co-headed 
by the United States, Russia and France.
Moscow says that Washington and Paris stopped cooperating with it in the Minsk 
Group format after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. U.S. and French officials 
have not denied that.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

Karen Vardanyan provided financial donation amounting to 107 million AMD to 5 orphanages in Armenia on the occasion of June 1st

Aysor, Armenia
June 1 2022

There are 5 state orphanages in Armenia, where 591 children deprived from parental care live.

On June 1st, on the occasion of the International Day for Protection of Children, to turn children’s day into a celebration, and to address the needs of special institutions, benefactor Karen Vardanyan donated to orphanages passenger cars, necessary furniture, consumer electronics, special wheelchairs and chairs adapted for children with disabilities.

The total budget of the program amounted 107 million AMD.

Watch the video at the link below

[ Iran’s ] President Stresses Tehran’s Support for Advancement of Baku-Yerevan Peace Talks

Tasnim News Agency, Iran
June 2 2022
  • June, 02, 2022

In a phone call with his Armenian counterpart Vahagn Khachaturyan on Wednesday, the Iranian president expressed hope that the remaining issues between Baku and Yerevan would be solved peacefully in accordance with international law while respecting the two sides’ territorial integrity and national sovereignty as well as rights and security of the people in the Caucasus region.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran is deeply committed to the point that regional issues must be resolved through consensus and cooperation among all countries in the region and on the basis of common interests and mutual respect,” Raisi added.

According to reports, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azeri President Ilham Aliyev announced last month that their respective countries would be setting up border security and delimitation commissions, signaling a step towards the settlement of a decades-long conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Pashinyan and Aliyev met in Brussels in April for rare talks mediated by the European Council President Charles Michel.

Tensions between Yerevan and Baku remain high more than a year after the arch-foes fought a war over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region. The six-week conflict, which claimed more than 6,500 lives on both sides, ended in November 2020 with a Russian-brokered deal that left Azerbaijan largely in control of the territory.

Nagorno-Karabakh is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan but has been populated by ethnic Armenians. Russia has deployed 1,960 peacekeepers to the region for an initial five-year period. Since the truce, the two sides have accused each other of breaching the peace deal.

The Iranian president further warned against Israel’s plot to infiltrate into the region and urged regional nations to remain fully cautious in the face of the regime in order to prevent it from gaining a foothold.

He said the Zionist regime is by no means a friend of the regional nations, adding that it has committed “unprecedented” acts of oppression against the Palestinian people.

Raisi said Tehran supports the expansion of bilateral and multilateral cooperation in the fields of energy and transportation which would promote peace and stability and ensure economic prosperity in the region.

“As part of its principled policies, the Islamic Republic of Iran emphasizes and heeds preservation of the regional geopolitics, including international borders, respect for national sovereignty of countries and strengthening of the inter-regional communication infrastructure,” the Iranian president pointed out.

The Armenian president, for his part, commended Iran’s important and effective role in the region and its stance on regional developments.

Khachaturyan said Armenia is keen to boost economic, trade, political and cultural cooperation with Iran, noting that regular sessions of the two countries’ joint economic committee would certainly facilitate the expansion of relations.

The Armenians and the Porte [archives]

The Atlantic
Boston – June 2022
THE Eastern question has passed through many critical phases, but the present restlessness of the Armenians may possibly prove to be the most grave and insidious for the integrity of Turkey and the peace of Europe. Belittled by some, exaggerated by others, there is yet no doubt that this agitation is fomented by men of prominence, ambition, and ability. Although but a small minority of the nation, they are still in a position to press their claims with earnestness and often with impunity; for many of them reside outside of Turkey, while their desire for liberty is stimulated by the political activity of the nations among whom their lot is thrown. The latter fact, at least, leads them to urge their countrymen in Turkey to make demands and to resist oppression to a degree that may, perhaps, precipitate results quite opposite to those they intend. This agitation derives very great importance, likewise, from the circumstance that the integral rights of the Armenian people were emphatically recognized, and a clause looking to the amelioration of their condition was incorporated, in the famous Treaty of Berlin. It is not denied that, in some respects, Turkey has failed to carry out the engagements incurred under that international contract.

Here, then, we have something tangible. The chief support of the Armenian claims must be looked for in Article 61 of the Berlin Treaty. The Armenians, however worthy, cannot rely on the assistance of Europe to secure for them the advantages they seek on any sentimental grounds such as led the great powers, together with a multitude of chivalrous adventurers, to bring such effectual aid to Greece in her great revolution. It was the arts, the poetry, the great men, the wonderful romance and history of Greece, appealing to the enthusiasm of scholars and soldiers alike, that summoned the world to her aid. Interesting as are some of the incidents of Armenian history, it is only the truth to assert that Armenia has not and never had a hold on the imagination of Europe like that of Greece. It is, therefore, a most extraordinary piece of good fortune that the Armenians were remembered in the Treaty of Berlin ; for without that they might sue in vain for the attention of any of the European governments except Russia, who, for reasons of her own, is ever ready to interpose in favor of the oppressed, unless they happen to be her own subjects.

During the last twenty-five hundred years, or since they first emerged from their legendary period into the scope of authentic history, the Armenians have enjoyed a distinct political independence for less than a century and a half; portions of that people have also maintained a certain independence within limited districts of Armenia for short intervals. But by far the larger part of their historic existence has been passed under vassalage to Parthia, Persia, and Rome, At one time, indeed, their satraps actually paid tribute to Rome and Persia simultaneously. Their dynasties were either Arsacid, allied to the Parthian throne, or of the Bagratid Hebrews family. For several centuries Armenia has been divided among Persia, Turkey, and Russia. Nor are the limits of ancient Armenia so precise and well defined as to afford any positive outline that the imagination can easily grasp, or on which a statesman could base distinct demands for the rehabilitation of the ancient Armenian dominion, such as we see so clearly marked out in Greece and the Greek islands, or, in a less degree, in the liberated provinces of Turkey in Europe. Such details are not unimportant in the case of a people which is looking for assistance in asserting its independence. They are essential in order to arouse that popular foreign interest which plays so important a part in directing the counsels of cabinets, and the movement of armies to relieve the real or alleged distresses of the oppressed. Here, again, we see the great value of Article 61 of the Berlin Treaty. What their cause lacks, therefore, in other directions, the Armenians can supply by planting themselves on that treaty. It gives them a relative importance, which they could hardly hope to obtain as yet from any other claim they could urge. It is true that most of the powers, while recognizing all the provisions of the treaty, would still be loath, except in extreme necessity, to hold the Porte to absolute fulfillment of every clause of that instrument, because they are aware of the difficulties attending administration and reform in a theocratic government made up of many antagonistic nationalities. They wotdd also hesitate to give Russia too much encouragement in pushing the network of mines with which she proposes to blow up the Turkish Empire. Europe needs that empire some time longer. While maintaining the principles of the treaty, therefore, they are disposed to accept the general good will of the Sultan, without laying too much stress on the letter of the compact.

With Russia it is quite otherwise. Article 61 may possibly prove of great use to her, for in case of any real or alleged maladministration she can arraign the Turkish government on the score of the very treaty which she herself has broken by fortifying Batoom. While penetrating her real designs through that philanthropic disguise, the powers could not openly accuse her of insincerity, or dispose of her assumptions to pose as the liberator of the Armenians. It is just here that we see the insidious character, the grave possibilities, of the present Armenian agitation. There is a plausibility in any advances made by Russia to relieve the Armenians which did not exist in the case of the Bulgarians, while any attempt to force Turkey to yield them territorial independence would prove exceedingly hazardous to the perpetuity of that empire.

As regards the reasons which the Armenians urge for the restoration of their freedom, one of the most specious is the fact that they are Christians, and henee should receive the united coöperation of Christendom in aid of such a result. Christians, they argue, should be unwilling to see Christians under subjection to pagans and infidels. They are of Aryan origin, belonging to the great Indo-European family, and were one of the first, or, as they claim, the first nation whose sovereigns embraced Christianity, slightly previous to the conversion of Constantine the Great. Their creed and hierarchical organization are similar to those of the Eastern Church ; but by refraining from attending the Synod of Chalcedon, and by adopting, as it is alleged, views of their own regarding the question of the Father and the Son and the precession of the Holy Ghost, they have been considered by the Greek and Roman Catholic communions as of doubtful orthodoxy; if not absolutely doomed to hell fire for heresy, they are regarded as standing uncomfortably near the “ danger line.” They endured great persecution from their Persian rulers in the early centuries, and in the fifteenth century a violent schism rent the nation into two distinct and until now irreconcilable bodies. Jesuit missionaries induced probably a fourth of the Armenian nation to secede, and those sectaries have since then practically had their headquarters at Venice, and have been protected by the Catholic powers. The present agitation is confined chiefly to the so-called Old Armenians.

It is somewhat the habit of Protestants to speak of the Armenians as nominal Christians. The term seems to be ill advised, likely to arouse unnecessary prejudices, and is no more applicable to them than to any other people whom a tendency to exaggerate the importance of forms and ceremonies leads to substitute non-essentials for essentials, the letter for the spirit. Every sect, whether Christian, Buddhist, or Mohammedan, abounds in such dead-and-alive material. As for the orthodoxy of the Armenian Church, that is a question which no one has received a special dispensation for passing judgment upon. No men have a right to assume that they, and they alone, can settle questions so subtle and vexed as to tax the wisest, — questions whose solution can be decisively reached only in the next world. It is sufficient for the claim of the Armenians that they are Christians ; the Russian Church tacitly admits this. While on the one hand condemning them as heretics, on the other hand she concedes their Christianity by undertaking to protect them on the ground that they are Christians.

The heroism displayed by the martyrs of the Armenian Church, which is urged by some as an additional reason for maintaining the solidarity of the nation and treating its claims with respect, is altogether a side issue, and should have no weight in deciding the question. For every nation and every religion has had its martyrs, equally heroic, whether Buddhists, Magians, Islamites, or Christians. It is sufficient that the Armenians are Christians, and their claim on that score merits serious consideration as a factor in the settlement of the present agitation. There is no doubt that this is with many Christian nations an all-sufficient argument in favor of the immediate emancipation of the Armenians.

While conceding, however, that if this is a sufficient argument to cause the liberation of all subject Christian races the Armenians are entitled to its full benefit, we maintain that the question of religion is one to be eliminated from all political discussions ; the deliberations of statesmen should be conducted without admitting religion as an element in the settlement of national or race problems. The world is constantly growing more enlightened, more elevated in sentiment, more humane, and more tolerant and Christian in theory and practice. Hence should naturally follow a wider acceptance of the principle of absolute separation of church and state, each taking care of itself, — the one by guiding the conscience, the other by the exercise of civil power. The oppressed should learn to demand their freedom not because they belong to this or that sect, but because all are equally entitled to the enjoyment of natural rights. The Irish, for example, should learn that they are entitled to receive their independence, when they seek it, not as Roman Catholics, but solely as men inheriting and occupying the same soil. It is the community of civil, and not religious, interests that makes a nation. The Armenians will deserve a sympathy based on sounder principles if they demand their rights because they are Armenians, and not because their rulers are Moslems. That should be the only legitimate ground on which to assert a national bill of rights. Human sympathy should be awarded to the oppressed on the score of common humanity, not on the score of unity of belief.

Viewing the case from this point, we maintain that the Turks have quite as much right to hold dominion over the Christians whom they vanquished by their military genius as the English have to rule the Mohammedans of India. Again and a fortiori, under the established law which has ordained the survival of the fittest and the rule of the strongest, from the smallest insect to the greatest man, a law that will always obtain in this world, Turkey has an undisputed right to rule until a stronger takes away that right. She has as much right to rule Greeks or Armenians as Prussia, Austria, or Russia have to throttle the life of Poland, or France has to subjugate Algeria, or the United States to wrest Texas from Mexico. To impugn the right of the Turks to hold territory and to rule wherever they have the power is to fly in the face of the laws by which empires have always been founded, and to question the title of every nation in Christendom. For the Armenians to seek their freedom, therefore, on the ground that their rulers are of another religion, or to assume that these have no rights over them because those rights were acquired by conquest, is intelligible enough, but does not furnish a reasonable ground for the interposition of other nations.

But, urge the Armenians, 舠 we are oppressed beyond measure by the Turks.” This, if entirely correct, would prove a very strong argument in favor of the agitation now going forward. What are the facts ? It must be admitted, unfortunately, that the present condition of that people is one of considerable hardship. They are forced to pay heavy taxes, and are often subjected to the rapacity of unprincipled governors at a distance from the capital. Those who live in the eastern part of Asia Minor are also liable to the savage raids of the Kurds. Were it evident that the Armenians are singled out as the objects of such outrages, or that they are especially hated, or that they are harassed beyond any other people in Christendom, then indeed should Christendom arise as one man, hurl the Turk from his throne, and, gathering in the Armenians from all parts of the world, reestablish them on the plateau of Armenia, and give them a chance to work out among themselves the problem of national existence. But this is very far from being the case. As regards the Kurds, they are an unruly lot, turbulent, treacherous, and cruel from the time when Xenophon hewed his way through them to the present day. They have never been completely subdued. One of the first enterprises that a new Armenia would have to undertake would be to subdue these same Kurds; and a nice test it would be of the courage and military skill of the Armenians. No one would rejoice more than the Sultan to see the lawless mountaineers of Kurdistan civilized and tamed.

As to the oppression of Turkish officials, it is a well-known fact that they are no respecters of persons. It matters not to them whether the subjects are Greeks, Jews, Armenians, or Turks. All are more or less liable to oppression resulting from the necessity of raising heavy taxes in a poor country. The treasury must be supplied to maintain a large standing army, whose numbers might be greatly reduced if the Christian subjects of the Porte would cease their chronic agitations, and if Russia, already mistress of half a world, would cease to hunger for additions to her unwieldy possessions.

Nor are the Armenians oppressed to any such degree as some of the people of Christian nations. They have liberty to go and come when and where and how they please, to study abroad and acquire every modern idea of progress and freedom. They are not obliged to serve in the army, which is an enormous immunity. To be sure, they pay a special tax for this privilege ; but how many of them would be willing to exchange this tax for conscription into an ill-paid service during the best years of their lives, with a chance of being riddled with balls from time to time? There are many Turks who would willingly give half their substance to escape the conscription.

The Armenians also enjoy every liberty for trade and business, and as they are essentially a commercial people this is no small advantage. Armenians have generally been the serâphs, or bankers, of the empire, and some of the largest fortunes in Turkey have been accumulated by individuals of that race. Man for man, it is quite likely that the average amount of wealth distributed among the Armenians is equal to, if not greater than, that of the Turks themselves.

It is to be remembered also that these people in Turkey enjoy a degree of religious liberty far greater than is popularly supposed. Recently, it is true, the government forbade the printing of the ritual and of certain books that have been published there for centuries. This led to the resignation of the Patriarch, or Catholicos, of Constantinople. But he has resumed his position, which indicates a modification or rescinding of the obnoxious order. It was caused by the extreme irritation of the Turks, and their apprehensions as well, owing to the Armenian agitations. The Sultan is friendly to the Armenians, and is well aware that their alleged grievances spring from no intention of the government to discriminate against them. The Armenians of the intelligent classes suffer somewhat from the severe censorship of the press in Turkey. But here again they are partially to blame. The swarms of foreign and native intriguers, who are perpetually straining every nerve and employing every means to foment disturbances in Turkey, force the government, against its own preferences, to guard the issues of the press. Self-protection is the first law of nature, and an unrestricted press is possible only when representative government is very fully developed. Even France is timid in this regard. If these agitations were to cease, the censorship of the press would be greatly modified, and many reforms would gradually be introduced; for the Turkish government is far more inclined to be liberal towards all its subjects than some of the governments of Europe to their own subjects. We think, if those who are now striving to disturb the entente cordiale between the Porte and its Armenian subjects were to look over the border into Russia, they would discover that, whatever may be alleged against Turkish rule, that of Russia is infinitely more iniquitous. Turkey is gradually reaching out towards reform, while Russia is rapidly returning to a bondage, an oppression, a’ terrorism, an intolerance, for whose parallel we must go back to the dark ages.

But granting everything they urge in favor of an agitation for national independence, what prospect have the Armenians of gaining their end by such means? Absolutely none. They are a sturdy, handsome, ambitious, sober, industrious, and thrifty people; not brilliant, perhaps, but abounding in common sense. Asiatic and retaining many early Asiatic customs and traits, they yet take more kindly to city life and to European habits and methods of thought than almost any other Asiatics. They are, however, widely dispersed. Numbering not over four millions, of whom probably a million are Roman Catholics who are little concerned in the movement for a new Armenia, there is no one spot where there is an appreciable collection of Armenians equaling the other populations of such locality. They are scattered all over the Turkish Empire. Many of them are subjects of Russia and Persia. In Constantinople and Smyrna there are over three hundred thousand; but even there they are vastly outnumbered by the Turks. They are not a warlike people, by which we do not mean to say they are lacking in spirit and courage ; but it is useless to deny that their record is not that of a nation of soldiers. Still, if a million or two of them were concentrated in a mountain district, as were the Circassians, thoroughly armed and organized and inured to fighting, they might present a very respectable front against attack, and hold their own until they should command respect and assistance from abroad, as was the case with the Greeks in their revolution. But nothing in the remotest degree resembling such a condition exists among the Armenians.

They form scarcely an eighth of the population of the Turkish Empire, in the midst of a military people, having a standing army well equipped and trained, and capable of displaying soldierly qualities unsurpassed by any troops in Europe. The world has not forgotten how Osman Pashâ held the whole of Russia at bay at Plevna, and was only forced to yield at last when Russian gold insinuated itself into the pockets of certain officials who managed to withhold reinforcements. What, we ask, can the Armenians expect to accomplish, unaided, against the strong arm of the Osmanlis ? They would be totally demolished, and the Turks would be justified in crushing them so that they would never revolt again, because every established government has a right to protect itself in the interests of all concerned. It is, moreover, a crime for any people or faction to create a rebellion and attack the public peace unless there is some reasonable hope of success. In this case there is absolutely not the slightest basis for such a hope, and the only result would be great bloodshed and increased acerbity of feeling.

There remains, however, another resource. The European powers might be appealed to for intervention, since they have already recognized the rights in equity, if not in law, of the Armenian people in the Treaty of Berlin. But it is not likely, for obvious reasons, that any of them but Russia would do more than that at present. England, were Mr. Gladstone in power, might offer more positive intervention; but the influence of that statesman in foreign affairs has been greatly weakened by the loss of prestige to England during his last administration. It would also be an act of the grossest injustice to force Turkey to liberate her part of Armenia unless Persia and Russia also ceded back to the Armenians their shares of that country. Turkey’s right to possess a third of Armenia is equal to that of those two governments, while her rule is, to say the least, as benign as that of Russia.

The recourse which the Armenians might have to Europe for aid is reduced, then, to the simple fact that it would be from Russia, and Russia alone, that such aid could be reasonably expected, Russia only waits the word and the hour. Her agents are found everywhere instigating the Armenians to agitate and revolt. She yearns, she burns, for the day when, her intrigues having matured, the Armenians shall rise against the Turks. By asserting their rights and causing the suppression of riots and revolts with unavoidable bloodshed, the latter will then furnish Russia with the casus belli which she has plotted, and for which her pious legions are camping on the border.

The first result might be the liberation of the Armenians, and the temporary establishment of a small Armenian state, of course under the tender protection of Holy Russia. But the end would be the rapid absorption of that state by Russia, who would need only the flimsiest pretext. The position of Servia and Bulgaria, adjacent to powers watchful of Russia, and able to manœuvre on her flank much to her disadvantage, has prevented that power from swallowing up those two countries, as she intended to do when hypocritically fighting for their liberation from Turkey. By the perpetual intrigues she has maintained in those states, she has unmistakably shown her hand to all but those who are determined not to see. But such reasons would have little or no weight in Asia, and the Armenians would soon learn, to their eternal sorrow, that their hopes of again enjoying the privilege of becoming an independent nation must he postponed until the fall of the Russian Empire.

There are, as we see, two points to consider in this question: the rights of the Turkish government, which are as sound as those of any other government having territory and subjects won by conquest, — and there are few or none that are not in that position, — and the rights and aspirations of the Armenians. The Turks cannot be expected to abandon their rights any more than any other ruling people; it would afford a dangerous precedent, and would practically amount to committing hara-kiri. But the Porte is not ill disposed towards its Armenian subjects, and but for the present unfortunate agitations and intrigues might have been expected to grant further concessions.

Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, better known as Sir Stratford Canning, was the ablest diplomat and the most clearsighted statesman of England, and perhaps of Europe, in this century. England has had abundant cause to deplore his loss. He knew the Turks well, and appreciated their good no less than their evil qualities. He was also a true and noble benefactor of the Christians and Hebrews of Turkey. It was precisely because he could see the merits and rights of each that he was able to persuade the Sultan to issue, in 1856, the famous charter of reform, or bill of equal rights, called the Hatti-Humayun. If the complete fulfillment of the reforms it promised has been somewhat retarded, owing partly to the influence of such unfit envoys as Sir Henry Bulwer, there is, on the other hand, no reason to infer that the Porte has ever desired to revoke its provisions. And every candid and intelligent observer of the affairs of Turkey must allow that very decided progress in many directions has been made in that country, and that the tendency continues favorable. What Turkey most needs at present is freedom from foreign interference.

The best friends of that most interesting and progressive people, the Armenians, cannot but feel that by far the wisest course for them is, therefore, by moderation and patience to establish a modus vivendi between themselves and the government, doing all they can to restore the confidence of the latter in their loyalty and subordination. In this way they may gradually gain more offices, and eventually have a certain province set aside for them under an Armenian governor tributary to the Sultan. A similar experiment has been successfully tried in other parts of the empire. The rest will come m time, with the maturing of the designs of an overruling Providence. But if the Armenians allow hot-headed or unprincipled agitators to push them into open revolt, they are bound to suffer enormous misery when the Turks distinctly understand their purpose. If they should succeed in bringing about the fall of the Turkish Empire, they would themselves plunge into the abyss of national annihilation by absorption into the Russian Empire, with all that such a calamity implies.

The Turks are not the worst nor the most cruel people in the world, as they are represented to be. The Armenians are far from being the most oppressed of men. They have energy and ability on their side. If to these qualities they add the wisdom of patience, Fortune will of herself relent at last in their favor.

S. G. WBenjamin.

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1891/04/the-armenians-and-the-porte/634344/ 

Sports: Republic of Ireland lose Nations League opener in Armenia [& compilation of links]

May 4 2022
Sat, 4 June 2022, 8:02 pm

Republic of Ireland’s Nations League misery continued as Eduard Spertsyan blasted Armenia to victory in Yerevan.

The midfielder hammered a long-range 75th-minute effort past keeper Caoimhin Kelleher, making his competitive debut for Ireland, to hand the League B newcomers victory and revenge for their controversial Euro 2012 qualifier defeat in Dublin.

Stephen Kenny’s men, who have now not won in 11 attempts since the competition was introduced, could have few complaints on a night when their eight-game unbeaten run came to a disappointing end at a sweltering Republican Stadium.

Ireland enjoyed the upper hand for long periods, but failed to convert dominance into chances.

Callum Robinson had a mishit first-half shot cleared off the line and Chiedozie Ogbene headed over when he might have done better, but they wilted after the break and were caught by a sucker punch, albeit one delivered with aplomb.

With skipper Seamus Coleman and Enda Stevens operating as wing-backs, Ireland went straight on to the offensive in an effort to seize the initiative, but it was Kelleher, playing in place of the injured Gavin Bazunu, who was called upon to keep out Tigran Barseghyan’s skidding sixth-minute effort after Nathan Collins had surrendered the ball.

Shane Duffy had to block Spertsyan’s shot at full stretch seconds later and the defender picked up a ninth-minute booking for an untidy challenge on Barseghyan.

Ireland threatened for the first time when Josh Cullen fed Ogbene and he slid the ball into Callum Robinson’s path, but the striker could only ripple the side-netting with his attempt.

Neither side was able to exert any measure of control in an error-strewn passage of play and Robinson might have done better when he scuffed Ogbene’s 16th-minute cross towards goal, where Hovhannes Hambardzumyan cleared off the line.

Ireland were unable to break down Armenia (AP Photo/Hakob Berberyan)

Duffy headed over from Cullen’s corner with the visitors having regained their composure, but clear-cut openings proved few and far between.

Armenia keeper David Yurchenko caused panic in his own penalty area with a less than effective punch as he attempted to deal with Troy Parrott’s driven cross and Spertsyan survived penalty appeals for handball as Coleman recycled.

Ogbene dragged a 38th-minute shot past the far post after Robinson had collected Hendrick’s fine pass and squared before Parrott curled wide from distance four minutes before the break with Ireland pressing.

However, Ogbene passed up perhaps the best chance of the half in stoppage time when he was left unmarked from Cullen’s free-kick, but powered his header inches over.

The home side served warning of the threat they posed on the break within five minutes of the restart when Barseghyan played Hambardzumyan into space down the right and then collected his return pass before stepping neatly inside Parrott to curl a superb shot into the top corner.

However, the celebrations at the Republican Stadium died almost as soon as they had begun as an offside flag spared Kenny’s side and Barseghyan could not find the same accuracy with a similar effort from greater range six minutes later.

Duffy headed a 62nd-minute Cullen corner straight at Yurchenko and put another attempt wide from Stevens’ cross seconds later as the visitors responded.

Hendrick curled a 69th-minute shot into Yurchenko’s midriff, but it was Armenia who took the lead with 15 minutes left on the clock when Spertsyan was allowed to close in on goal before unleashing a 25-yard strike which beat Kelleher’s despairing dive and went in off the upright.

John Egan thumped a later header wide as the Republic sought salvation but Armenia, who lost 9-0 in Norway last time out, held firm to take the points.

https://uk.sports.yahoo.com/news/republic-ireland-lose-nations-league-150841392.html 

ALSO READ
‘Football taught us a big lesson. It can be a cruel game’ – Ogbene reflects on defeat in Armenia – Independent.ie
https://www.independent.ie/sport/soccer/international-soccer/football-taught-us-a-big-lesson-it-can-be-a-cruel-game-ogbene-reflects-on-defeat-in-armenia-41720314.html
Ireland were beaten 1-0 by Armenia today | The Irish Post
https://www.irishpost.com/sport/ireland-were-beaten-1-0-by-armenia-today-235213
Armenia stun Ireland as Kenny’s men crash in Nations league – Sporting Life
https://sportinglife.ng/armenia-stun-ireland-as-kennys-men-crash-in-nations-league/
Republic of Ireland rocked by Armenia to extend Nations League drought | Nations League | The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/football/2022/jun/04/republic-of-ireland-rocked-by-armenia-to-extend-nations-league-drought
Armenia 1-0 Republic of Ireland: ‘Football taught us a big lesson,’ says Chiedozie Ogbene after shock defeat – BBC Sport
https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/61689920
Richard Dunne’s cutting verdict on Ireland’s defeat in Armenia – SundayWorld.com
https://www.sundayworld.com/sport/soccer/richard-dunnes-cutting-verdict-on-ireland-after-horrible-defeat-in-armenia-41720374.html
Richard Dunne issues damning Ireland assessment after Armenia loss – Pundit Arena
https://punditarena.com/football/andrew-dempsey/richard-dunne-ireland-v-armenia/
Stephen Kenny: “We only have ourselves to blame” for Armenia defeat – Irish Mirror Online
https://www.irishmirror.ie/sport/soccer/stephen-kenny-we-only-ourselves-27147812
Stephen Kenny: Ireland did not deserve to lose to Armenia – The Irish Times
https://www.irishtimes.com/sport/soccer/2022/06/04/stephen-kenny-ireland-did-not-deserve-to-lose-to-armenia/
‘One of Armenia’s greatest victories’ – Republic Of Ireland suffer horrific defeat as woeful Nations League run continues for Stephen Kenny’s side (talksport.com)
https://talksport.com/football/1123522/republic-of-ireland-armenia-nations-league/
Richard Dunne criticises Ireland performance in defeat to Armenia | SportsJOE.ie
https://www.sportsjoe.ie/football/richard-dunne-ireland-armenia-263140
Armenia Ireland Nations League Soccer | AP Sports | The Daily News (galvnews.com)
https://www.galvnews.com/ap/sports/image_c0050760-abb1-5112-8bc3-129007bab10b.html
ARMENIA 1-0 REPUBLIC OF IRELAND | Vinny Perth – post-match reaction | Nations League | OTB Sports
https://www.otbsports.com/podcasts/otb-football/armenia-1-0-republic-of-ireland-vinny-perth-post-match-reaction-nations-league
Highlights and goal: Armenia 1-0 Ireland in UEFA Nations League 2022-23 | 06/04/2022 – VAVEL USA
https://www.vavel.com/en-us/soccer/2022/06/04/1113559-armenia-vs-ireland-live-stream-score-updates-and-how-to-watch-uefa-nations-league-match.html
Agony in Armenia as  Republic of Ireland shocked by minnows (irishexaminer.com)
https://www.irishexaminer.com/sport/soccer/arid-40888538.html
Republic of Ireland lose Nations League opener in Armenia (aol.co.uk)
https://www.aol.co.uk/sport/republic-ireland-lose-nations-league-150841306.html 
Ireland shocked in Armenia as Spertsyan hits winner (rte.ie)
https://www.rte.ie/sport/soccer/2022/0604/1303042-ireland-shocked-in-armenia-as-spertsyan-hits-winner/
Player ratings as Ireland lose 1-0 to Armenia in Yerevan – Irish Mirror Online
https://www.irishmirror.ie/sport/soccer/player-ratings-ireland-lose-1-27146926
Stephen Kenny’s big mistake in shocking loss to Armenia – Pundit Arena
https://punditarena.com/football/rudi-kinsella/ireland-armenia-coleman-kenny/
Grim evening in the Caucasus as Armenia continue Ireland’s Nations League drought – The Irish Times
https://www.irishtimes.com/sport/soccer/2022/06/04/grim-evening-in-the-caucasus-as-armenia-continue-irelands-nations-league-drought/

Sports: Armenia recall their ‘Thierry Henry moment’ a decade on from incident in Dublin clash

Independent, Ireland
June 4 2022

Former Armenia head coach Vardan Minasyan. Photo: Getty Images

A dressing room full of players in tears, while back home, a nation is outraged as the referee misses a clear handball with an outcome that’s devastating for the national team.

It’s not Paris 2009, with Thierry Henry’s infamous handball, but Dublin 2011, an event never to be forgotten in Armenia. Their ‘what if?’ moment. To recap, in the final group game for the Euro 2012 qualifiers, Ireland hosted Armenia, with second place up for grabs between the two teams in a group already won by Russia.

Twenty-five minutes in, Armenia looked the more likely winners than a nervous and unconvincing Irish side. Then, the Spanish referee saw an incident on the edge of the box with ’keeper Roman Berezovsky and decided the away player had handled the ball outside his area, although he had chested it, and sent the Armenian off. However, he had missed a handball by Irish striker Simon Cox moments before and had allowed play to continue.

So Armenia lost their net-minder, meaning their third-choice ’keeper came off the bench for his debut, forcing them to play away from home with 10 men for over an hour.

They looked on with a growing rage as Ireland ended up with a 2-1 win after going 2-0 up. The victory gave the Republic second place, the play-off draw was kind (Ireland got Estonia) and Giovanni Trapattoni’s men went to the finals, while Armenia never recovered from that blow and spent a decade playing catch-up. And thought ‘what if?’

“Looking back, it’s a great pity. We were so close to qualifying,” says Vardan Minasyan, Armenia’s manager at the time. 

“The players were in tears after the game. I was more calm, maybe it’s because I am older and more experienced. I knew that life is not always fair. Sometimes the big nations get decisions that smaller teams don’t get.

“In Ireland, you say that France got a decision against you [2009] because they were a big nation. At the time, a lot of Armenian people said it was the same for us in 2011. The big nation – Ireland – got the decision in their favour. Then you got Estonia in the play-off, the weakest team in the draw, and I know we could have beaten them. We could have finished second ahead of you. We could have gone to the Euros. But I know if you expect life to be fair, you’ll be disappointed.”

The 48-year-old, though, is not expecting a revenge mission approach from Armenia today.

“For me, it’s gone, it was 11 years ago. You move on in your life and none of those players from 2011 are still in the squad. In my career, I never speak about the referee, but that night was a difficult one for me. It happened very quickly and the referee made a quick decision,” he says.

“It was a pity for us, what happened, but that’s football. We had a young squad and it was a good achievement for us to go so close. We had to play for 65 minutes with our third-choice goalkeeper, making his debut.

“It was no foul. It was a handball by your player, we can see this on the TV. Your player (Cox) told our players after the game that he had handled the ball. It should have been a free-kick for us. 

“Some people in Armenia still speak about the game.

“We do remember that the game was the last international match for that referee. That says a lot.

  
Learn more

“I think Armenian people remember the referee more than the Irish player who was involved. Perhaps the supporters today will make some noises about it, but it’s about supporting their team, not remembering something that happened 11 years ago.”

Trapattoni’s Ireland finished four points ahead of Armenia, but the two games involving the teams could have been draws instead of Irish wins, as it took a late Keith Fahey goal for Ireland to win 1-0 in Yerevan.

“Experience won it for you,” he says. “We had a lot of energy. I had taken 10 or 11 players from our Under-21s into the senior squad, they were good players, but we had no experience and Ireland had all these Premier League players. You had [Robbie Keane] and [Richard] Dunne and [Damien] Duff – I don’t know the names of the Irish players now. So in Yerevan, the experienced team won against the youngsters. The game was very even until your player scored the goal. Maybe a 0-0 would have been fair.”

Irish eyes already had a glimpse of Armenian talent as their side had just trounced the Republic 4-1 and 2-1 at U-21 level and players like Henrikh Mkhitaryan emerged (he was the overall top scorer in the qualifying group for Euro 2012).

They pushed for qualification for the next tournament, the 2014 World Cup, drawing away to Italy and winning 4-0 in Denmark, but from a hard-won place in the top 30 of the FIFA rankings, they’ve been on a slide (Armenia now 94th in the world) and Euro 2012 was their missed opportunity. 

Mkhitaryan, who retired from international football earlier this year, is badly missed, though Minasyan plays down the recent 9-0 friendly loss to Norway.

“Henrikh is a big loss for us. You can see the clubs he played for, so take a player like that out of your team and you will be weaker. He was our biggest player and it’s a challenge for the new generation to try and do as well,” says Minasyan.

“Vahan Bichakhchyan, who plays in Poland, is a very strong, Eduard Spertsyan in midfield is also very promising and can play at a higher level. He’s in Russia now with Krasnodar and I also like Tigran Barseghyan, who’s with Slovan Bratislava. Henrikh was a great guy to manage, he had a great football brain. I see players who have talent but do not have the right attitude.

“They become big stars in their own heads and go the wrong way. If our young players can keep the right attitude, they can do well, but finding a new Mkhitaryan will be very difficult.”

https://www.independent.ie/sport/soccer/international-soccer/armenia-recall-their-thierry-henry-moment-a-decade-on-from-incident-in-dublin-clash-41719000.html

Sports: Save Armenian football – Enigma opponent emerges from the shadow of former president

The Irish Times
June 4 2022
Soccer
Sat Jun 4 2022 – 06:00

In the Armenian capital Yerevan, the graffiti gets straight to the point. On a busy road near the summit of the city’s Cascade, a Soviet-era concrete stairway built into Yerevan’s natural contours that rises nearly 400 feet above the city, a simple message is stencilled on a grey wall blackened from fumes: “Save Armenian football”.

The message dates to before Armenia’s Velvet Revolution of 2018, when the Football Federation of Armenia (FFA) was ruled by its former president, the businessman and parliamentary deputy Ruben Hayrapetyan, a ruthless and unpopular figure who, critics say, held the federation in an iron grip and was personally responsible for the corruption that has been endemic to football since the country gained its independence in 1991.

Hayrapetyan was swept away with the rest of the Nomenklatura booted from power when the country’s former president, Serzh Sargsyan, was removed following massive street demonstrations four years ago. The result has been an overdue “democratisation” of football governance, and a transparency in the way the FFA does business that has brought change both to the domestic championship and to the national team.

Armenia – population less than three million – does not pretend to be a powerful football country. But there has always been potential here. Led by their first global superstar, Henrikh Mkhitaryan, the team made a brave stab at qualifying for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, thrashing Denmark 4-0 in Copenhagen.

The team is an enigma. During Euro 2020 qualifying, they were in pole position to reach the finals with three games to go before a spectacular implosion that culminated in a 9-1 defeat to Italy in Palermo. They have since conceded nine again in a friendly against Norway, yet just 12 months earlier they had beaten Iceland and Romania to lead their World Cup qualifying group just before the halfway stage.

On the eve of those qualifiers, Armenia’s vocal football supporters were granted a wish they had long called for, the appointment of an overseas coach. In came the 66-year-old Spaniard Joaquin Caparros, the archetypal journeyman boasting 22 previous appointments including at Villarreal, Athletic Bilbao and Sevilla. Armenia’s most successful period had been masterminded by a foreigner, the late Ian Porterfield, former Chelsea manager, whose memory is cherished here. Supporters were hopeful of a repeat.

  
Learn more

“One of our demands has always been that the FFA appoint a proper, talented coach,” says Arsen Zaqaryan, a member of the First Armenian Front (FAF), a supporter activist group that formed to be the principal point of opposition to Hayrapetyan’s influence. In a climate of fear and suspicion, they were the only voices that spoke out publicly against the former president. “Our native coaches aren’t qualified for the job, but Hayrapetyan would not listen. We have wanted a foreign coach for a long, long time, but we could not be heard.

“This guy [Caparros] is a proper coach. He had a really good start, in the World Cup and in the Nations League. Then something went wrong and I don’t think he quite knew why.

“People are ready to trust him, he’s well liked, he’s very positive. Nobody is calling for him to be removed. People want him to be given another chance, because we’ve had some really good games under him. I think that could change if we have a poor Nations League and a poor European Championship campaign.”

Either way Armenian football is, for the first time in the country’s short history, deemed to be in safe hands, to the relief of the FAF and other stakeholders who had grown tired of Hayrapetyan’s interference.

It wasn’t just supporters who had run out of patience. In December 2019, police raided the former president’s mansion as part of an investigation into suspected embezzlement, falsification of documents, and misuse of powers in a commercial organisation, all in relation to his tenure as FFA chief.

They are far from the most serious charges to have been brought against him. In 2012, he was forced to give up his seat in parliament, where he represented the party of his close ally, the deposed former president Sargsyan, after security men in his employ murdered a military doctor at a restaurant owned by Hayrapetyan in Yerevan. In 2015, he avoided prosecution despite admitting to carrying out a physical attack that left a business rival in hospital.

“Hayrapetyan is a criminal,” says Zaqaryan. “He’s from the 90s, he had his methods. Maybe there were some things that were better [in football] in his time, but in general this is a big improvement.

“He would have his favourite players, so talented players who deserved it never got called up. He would always decide. That favouritism, the interference from the president, is gone now.

“The new president, Armen Melikbekyan, is a former journalist. He’s more democratic, more educated, he has good knowledge of football. He also has good relations with the First Armenian Front, which is the most important thing. We’ve had a number of meetings between him and the FAF. We have good relations now with the FFA, which is very new. That never happened under Hayrapetyan.”

Sports: Armenia 1-0 Republic of Ireland: Eduard Spertsyan strike consigns Stephen Kenny’s side to Nations League defeat

SKY SPORTS
June 4 2022

Match report of the UEFA Nations League Group B1 encounter as Armenia secure narrow victory over Republic of Ireland at the Hanrapetakan Stadium; Eduard Spertsyan scores the only goal of the game in 74th minute

Republic of Ireland’s Nations League misery continued as Eduard Spertsyan blasted Armenia to victory in Yerevan.

The midfielder hammered a long-range 75th-minute effort past ‘keeper Caoimhin Kelleher, making his competitive debut for Ireland, to hand the League B newcomers victory and revenge for their controversial Euro 2012 qualifier defeat in Dublin.

Stephen Kenny’s men, who have now not won in 11 attempts since the competition was introduced, could have few complaints on a night when their eight-game unbeaten run came to a disappointing end at a sweltering Republican Stadium.

Ireland enjoyed the upper hand for long periods, but failed to convert dominance into chances.

  • How the teams lined up | Match stats
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Callum Robinson had a mishit first-half shot cleared off the line and Chiedozie Ogbene headed over when he might have done better, but they wilted after the break and were caught by a sucker punch, albeit one delivered with aplomb.

Shane Duffy had to block Spertsyan’s shot at full stretch seconds later and the defender picked up a ninth-minute booking for an untidy challenge on Barseghyan.

Ireland threatened for the first time when Josh Cullen fed Ogbene and he slid the ball into Robinson’s path, but the striker could only ripple the side-netting with his attempt.

Neither side was able to exert any measure of control in an error-strewn passage of play and Robinson might have done better when he scuffed Ogbene’s 16th-minute cross towards goal, where Hovhannes Hambardzumyan cleared off the line.

Duffy headed over from Cullen’s corner with the visitors having regained their composure, but clear-cut openings proved few and far between.

Armenia keeper David Yurchenko caused panic in his own penalty area with a less than effective punch as he attempted to deal with Troy Parrott’s driven cross and Spertsyan survived penalty appeals for handball as Coleman recycled.

Ogbene dragged a 38th-minute shot past the far post after Robinson had collected Hendrick’s fine pass and squared before Parrott curled wide from distance four minutes before the break with Ireland pressing.

However, Ogbene passed up perhaps the best chance of the half in stoppage time when he was left unmarked from Cullen’s free-kick, but powered his header inches over.

The home side served warning of the threat they posed on the break within five minutes of the restart when Barseghyan played Hambardzumyan into space down the right and then collected his return pass before stepping neatly inside Parrott to curl a superb shot into the top corner.

However, the celebrations at the Republican Stadium stopped almost as soon as they had begun as an offside flag spared Kenny’s side and Barseghyan could not find the same accuracy with a similar effort from greater range six minutes later.

Duffy headed a 62nd-minute Cullen corner straight at Yurchenko and put another attempt wide from Stevens’ cross seconds later as the visitors responded.

Hendrick curled a 69th-minute shot into Yurchenko’s midriff, but it was Armenia who took the lead with 15 minutes left on the clock when Spertsyan was allowed to close in on goal before unleashing a 25-yard strike which beat Kelleher’s despairing dive and went in off the upright.

John Egan thumped a later header wide as the Republic sought salvation but Armenia, who lost 9-0 in Norway last time out, held firm to take the points.

Stephen Kenny admitted the Republic of Ireland had only themselves to blame after slipping to defeat.

He said: “Obviously we lost the game, a tight game really overall. It’s not a game that we deserved to lose, you couldn’t say that on the balance of play or the balance of chances, but we’ve lost it and we’ve only got ourselves to blame, so we are disappointed.

“I felt the last 20-25 minutes of the first half, we were really in control, but we didn’t start the second half like that at all. I was disappointed that we didn’t start the second half like we ended the first.

“We seemed to be susceptible to counter-attacks and we found it difficult to break them down. We created some good chances but we didn’t take them, some half-chances, but they didn’t really have any chances bar the offside goal, so it was disappointing overall.”

Kenny’s side must regroup quickly with Ukraine and Scotland due to arrive in Dublin for the second and third instalments of this month’s quadruple-header, although the defeat in Yerevan was perhaps their most disappointing result since they were beaten 1-0 at home by Luxembourg in March last year.

Asked about his challenge to his players to win the group, he said: “We’ve made life difficult for ourselves, but rather than focusing on that, we’ve got to focus on bouncing back on Wednesday.

“We’ve got two home games now, we need to dust ourselves down. We’re disappointed with ourselves, we know it’s a poor result, we’re well aware of that.”

Armenia coach Joaquin Caparros was delighted with the way his side adopted a new approach after the break and were eventually rewarded.

He said: “I am very pleased with the way we played in the second half. I have to praise my players because it’s a very good result for our team.

“In the first half, they had a lot of possession of the ball but they didn’t have any opportunities apart from the very end, the header which went wide.

“We got more confidence and had more possession. We worked really hard and earned our luck with the goal.

“It’s one of the greatest victories of the Armenian football team because Ireland is a very good team.”

Asked if he felt Kenny had disrespected Armenia by talking about winning the group during the build-up, Caparros added: “It’s an opinion and it’s a way to motivate your own team.

“Football is only about the result. We don’t have to argue about anything because it’s only about the result.”

  • Armenia secured their first win against Republic of Ireland at the third attempt of trying, following defeats in September 2010 (1-0) and October 2011 (2-1).
  • Republic of Ireland suffered their first defeat in any competition since last September against Portugal in a World Cup qualifier, ending their eight-game unbeaten run.
  • Republic of Ireland have failed to win any of their 11 UEFA Nations League matches (D5 L6), while only San Marino (0) have netted fewer goals than the Boys in Green (2) in the competition’s history.
  • Armenia have won seven of their 13 games in the UEFA Nations League (D3 L3), finding the back of the net in 11 of their 13 games in the competition (24).
  • Eduard Spertsyan scored his second ever goal for Armenia and his first since his debut in March 2021 vs Romania.
  • James McClean (91) came on to become the 10th different player to make over 90 appearances for Republic of Ireland, having made his international debut back in February 2012.

Republic of Ireland host Ukraine in the Nations League Group B1 on Wednesday June 8 at the Aviva Stadium; kick-off 7.45pm.

With skipper Seamus Coleman and Enda Stevens operating as wing-backs, Ireland went straight on to the offensive in an effort to seize the initiative, but it was Kelleher, playing in place of the injured Gavin Bazunu, who was called upon to keep out Tigran Barseghyan’s skidding sixth-minute effort after Nathan Collins had surrendered the ball.

Sports: Armenia 1 – 0 Republic of Ireland

BBC News, UK
June 4 2022
Armenia 1 – 0 Republic of Ireland

The Republic of Ireland’s Nations League campaign began in deeply disappointing fashion as they fell to a surprise defeat by Armenia in Yerevan.

Eduard Spertsyan scored the only goal, beating Republic keeper Caoimhin Kelleher with a rasping drive from distance 16 minutes from time.

Chiedozie Ogbene squandered the visitors’ best chance, misjudging a free header in first-half injury time.

The result extends the Republic’s winless run in the Nations League.

It is now 11 games without victory in the competition, having scored just two goals in the process, and with three difficult games against Ukraine and Scotland to come over the next 10 days in Group B1.

An eight-game unbeaten run prior to Saturday’s match, including creditable draws at home to Portugal and Belgium, had lifted the mood around the Republic after a difficult start to Stephen Kenny’s reign.

  • As it happened: Republic stunned by Armenia

However, this result will likely attract further criticism after Kenny’s side were stunned by a team ranked 92nd in the world in a game that stirred memories of last year’s embarrassing World Cup qualifying defeat by Luxembourg.

The Irish were expected to overpower an Armenia team that lost 9-0 to Norway in their last outing in March, but Kenny’s side found the going tough against a resilient defensive unit led impressively by captain Varazdat Haroyan.

Having ridden waves of Irish pressure in the first half, Armenia appeared rejuvenated upon the resumption with the lively Tigran Barseghyan’s goal ruled out after Hovhannes Hambardzumyan had strayed offside before supplying the assist.

Barseghyan also curled an effort just wide from distance but the Republic did not heed the warning and were punished when Spertsyan was given time to turn and shoot from 25 yards, his shot going in off Kelleher’s right-hand post.

While Armenia celebrated in the Yerevan heat, the Republic only had themselves to blame after spurning a series of presentable chances to open the scoring.

Callum Robinson and Ogbene, two of the Republic’s brightest sparks over the past year, combined twice to good effect early on, with Robinson hitting the side-netting on 12 minutes before having a shot deflected behind after being found by the Rotherham attacker on both occasions.

It was Ogbene, however, who spurned the Republic’s biggest chance of the opening half when he failed to keep his free header down after Josh Cullen’s right-wing free-kick.

While Armenia can no longer call upon the playmaking talents of Henrikh Mkhitaryan, who retired from international football earlier this year, they offered glimpses of their threat with Barseghyan’s disallowed goal and effort from distance signs of the home side’s growing confidence.

The Republic, who ran out of ideas in a flat second-half display, had to wait until the 62nd minute to register their first effort on target when Shane Duffy headed straight at David Yurchenko before Jeff Hendrick curled a tame shot into the home keeper’s grasp.

But while the Irish grew increasingly dismayed in their attempts to break down the home side’s defence, Spertsyan picked up the ball and unleashed an unstoppable 25-yard drive to spark jubilant scenes among the home supporters.

From there, the Republic could only fashion a late header from John Egan that went wide as their miserable Nations League record continued ahead of a triple-header against more accomplished opposition in Ukraine and Scotland.

  • Line-ups
  • Match Stats
  • Live Text

Home TeamArmeniaAway TeamR. of Ireland
Possession
Home32%
Away68%
Shots
Home10
Away13
Shots on Target
Home3
Away2
Corners
Home2
Away6
Fouls
Home6
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