Aliyev: The name ‘Shushi’ has never been in history

NEWS.am
Armenia – April 29 2022

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev does not know the name “Shushi” and where it comes from. He stated about this at his meeting with the participants of the international conference entitled “South Caucasus: Development and Cooperation,” Haqqin.az reported.

It is especially symbolic that this hypocritical statement was made at the aforesaid conference which is being held in the Azerbaijani-occupied Armenian city of Shushi, Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh).

Accusing Armenia of “falsifying history,” the Azerbaijani leader said that “the policy of falsifying history has continued for 5-6 years; even after that it was supplemented with new parameters.”

“That is, they have even officially replaced the names of Azerbaijani cities with false Armenian names. For example, they started calling the city of Shusha ‘Shushi.’ The name ‘Shushi’ has never been in history; I do not even know what it means,” Aliyev said.

The ancient Artsakh capital of Shushi, has been subjected to numerous enemy invasions, as well as to the horrific massacre at the beginning of the last century. The Armenian Shushi has always been the object of desire of the Azerbaijanis. Ultimately, having captured Shushi after the 44-day war in the fall of 2020, the Azerbaijani authorities have begun to actively destroy its Armenian monuments and churches.

Parents of soldiers killed in 44-day war block street and demand meeting with prosecutor general

NEWS.am
Armenia – April 29 2022

Parents of soldiers killed in the 44-day war blocked Vazgen Sargsyan Street and demand a meeting with Prosecutor General Artur Davtyan.

They say they will keep the street closed until the prosecutor meets with them. For more than two hours parents have been in front of the prosecutor’s office.

Armenia Bloc MPs Artur Ghazinyan and Aram Vardevanyan are also there.

The prosecutor’s office suggested Artur Ghazinyan to come up to the building to discuss the parents’ demands, but the parents rejected the suggestion, saying they want to meet with the prosecutor themselves.

The parents demand a fair investigation and prosecution of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan for the disastrous consequences of the war.

Earlier the parents were told by the Prosecutor General’s Office that a petition concerning the Prime Minister had been sent to the Anti-Corruption Committee, and only in five days it will be clear what actions will be taken.

Eric Bogosian Joins ‘Anne Rice’s Interview With The Vampire’ For AMC

DEADLINE
March 17 2022

Somebody get Eric Bogosian a fedora: The Talk Radio alum has been cast in the upcoming series Anne Rice’s Interview with the Vampire as an investigative journalist.

Bogosian will play Daniel Molloy, a reporter who snags the interview of a lifetime with a charismatic bloodsucker. The series from Mark Johnson (Breaking Bad), Rolin Jones (Perry Mason, Friday Night Lights) and Christopher Rice is based on Anne Rice’s bestselling novel of the same name.

The author died in December.

“In 1988, I hit my mom up for money three times to see Talk Radio in the movie theaters,” said Jones, who will serve as showrunner and executive producer, in a statement. “I count Eric Bogosian as one of the half dozen artists who made me want to do this for a career. He is, for me, the dented car fender of the American Soul and I can think of no better actor/writer alive to play this role. I’m in total frothing geek mode about his casting.”

Bogosian joins previously announced cast Sam Reid (Lestat), Jacob Anderson (Louis), Bailey Bass (Claudia) and Assad Zaman (Rashid).  The first seven episodes of the series will premiere later this year on AMC and AMC+.  Alan Taylor will direct the first two episodes and executive produce the series.

Bogosian most recently starred in Uncut Gems as well as HBO’s Succession and Showtime’s Billions.

 

Georgian FM Meets Armenian Leaders

Civil, Georgia

Georgian Foreign Minister Ilia Darchiashvili is on April 29-30 visiting Yerevan, where he today held meetings with the Armenian President, Prime Minister, chief diplomat, and National Assembly Speaker.

The chief Georgian diplomat and President Vahagn Khachaturyan discussed positive dynamics in every area of bilateral cooperation and pledged to further bolster ties, a press release of the Georgian Foreign Ministry said.

The Armenian President’s office reported that the two officials stressed the importance of peace and stability for the development of the South Caucasus and continuous cooperation between Tbilisi and Yerevan to contribute to regional security.

Meanwhile, FM Darchiashvili and PM Nikol Pashinyan touched upon the prospects to further develop trade and economic ties and the people-to-people relations, the Georgian Foreign Ministry reported.

Speaking with FM Darchiashvili, PM Pashinyan stressed that the existing “high level of political dialogue between Armenia and Georgia” can be a foundation to further expand cooperation.

The Georgian chief diplomat and his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan discussed the importance of realizing the full potential of economic, trade, and transit ties, the Foreign Ministry of Georgia reported.

The two diplomats also agreed to work on new mechanisms to further promote tourist flows between Georgia and Armenia.

In the context of transit links, the diplomats focused on the importance of cooperation between Tbilisi and Yerevan in establishing the Persian Gulf-Black Sea Corridor, the Armenian Foreign Ministry said.

Also on April 30, FM Darchiashvili and Armenian National Assembly Speaker Alen Simonyan discussed parliamentary ties as well as security challenges on global and regional levels, the Georgian Foreign Ministry stated.

Speaker Simonyan told the Georgian diplomat that developing closer links with Tbilisi as well as taking steps “to improve relations with all its neighbors” are among Yerevan’s priorities, the Armenian Parliament’s press release said.

The trip to Yerevan was the first for FM Darchiashvili, following his appointment earlier in April.

Previously, on April 26-27, the top diplomat paid a visit to Baku.

 

Dr. Eric Esrailian continuing advocacy work with Armenian-American community

Fox 11 Los Angeles

Dr. Eric Esrailian has become a recognizable figure and leader within the Armenian-American community here in Los Angeles.

Dr. Esrailian currently oversees the Vatche and Tamar Manoukian Division of Digestive Diseases at UCLA, in addition to working with different schools on campus. 

“Peace agenda is not an agenda of defeat” – position of Armenian authorities on status of NK





  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

What did the authorities of Armenia and NK agree on?

A meeting of the Armenian authorities with the leadership of the unrecognized NKR was held in Yerevan. It is noteworthy that it took place amid protest movement of the Armenian opposition, demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. Oppositionists took to the streets after his statement about the international community expecting Armenia to “lower the bar on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh“.

According to political analysts, the opposition does not notice the change in the rhetoric of the prime minister’s latest statements, which took place after his visit to Moscow and meeting with the Russian president. Pashinyan now says that:

• the decisive vote on the settlement of the Karabakh problem belongs to NK and its people,
• no “secret” plan can be discussed at the negotiating table,
• it cannot be implemented “behind the backs” of NK residents.

What the participants of the meeting agreed on, as well as the opinion of the political scientist about what the latest statements of the Prime Minister of Armenia and the leadership of NK mean below.


  • Armenian opposition takes to streets, calls society to ‘wake up’
  • What should be expected from Karabakh talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan?
  • “Identical approaches to regional security”: Pashinyan on negotiations with Putin

According to the president of the unrecognized NKR, Arayik Harutyunyan, its residents welcome and accept the “peace agenda” promoted by the Armenian Prime Minister. According to him, “no one understands the price of peace better than the people of Artsakh”, at the same time, no one there intends to give up the right to self-determination.

The President thanked the Prime Minister of Armenia for discussing with the NK leadership all the topics and issues that are raised during the negotiations, but added that it could not be otherwise:

“In other words, it is impossible for a document to be [signed] that will be rejected by the people of Artsakh. We all understand this, we also realize that in this sense we have a long political struggle ahead of us”.

According to Arayik Harutyunyan, recently, with the mediation of Russian peacekeepers, the security situation has stabilized, which makes it possible to discuss socio-economic programs:

“If there is no one in Artsakh, then it becomes meaningless to talk about security and political struggle. Therefore, demographic, socio-economic programs are once again becoming important today”.

Armenia continues to discuss the future of the OSCE Minsk Group. Armenian expert comments on the possible fate of the format which has been mediating the Karabakh conflict settlement for 30 years

The Prime Minister of Armenia stressed that he is in constant, daily contact with the president of the unrecognized republic, just like before and after the 2020 war in Karabakh:

“We consider it important that the authorities of Artsakh be fully informed about our programs and plans, including the content of the negotiations on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, challenges and opportunities”.

The Prime Minister stated that the main beneficiary of the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is its people:

“Therefore, it is simply illogical for some kind of secret plan to be discussed [at the negotiating table] and implemented, this is simply impossible to imagine”.

Apparently, in this way Pashinyan responded to the accusations of him agreeing on the status of NK within Azerbaijan.

As for the peace agenda that he is promoting in the international arena, despite the resistance of the opposition forces in Armenia itself, the prime minister said:

“An agenda for peace is not an agenda for defeat. The peace agenda is an agenda for overcoming the horrors of war, post-war difficulties, ensuring the security of the people, their rights, and the future”.

Pashinyan added that he sees a path that can guarantee the security and rights of the people of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. He sure is moving in the right direction.

After the second Karabakh war, most residents of the border villages of the Syunik region of Armenia are facing identical problems, with safety being the main one

According to political scientist Tigran Grigoryan, the statements of Pashinyan and Harutyunyan indicate that a certain consensus is being formed between the authorities of Armenia and NK on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh:

“Yes, everyone agrees that there should be peace. The peace agenda has a number of components – the process of unblocking communications in the region, the delimitation and demarcation of borders with Azerbaijan, and, as a result, perhaps the signing of a document. But when it comes to the status of NK, then the decisive word should be with its authorities and people”.

According to the political scientist, this is one of the results of Nikol Pashinyan’s visit to Moscow:

“Russia is not interested in any cardinal changes in the issue of status, that is, in the fact that the parties come to a final settlement – in favour of one side or another”.

Tigran Grigoryan speaks about the change in emphasis and, in general, the tone of the statements of the Prime Minister of Armenia after his visit to Moscow and recalls Pashinyan’s speech at the government meeting on April 22. Then the Prime Minister said that he ruled out the possibility of signing the document “without a broad public discussion, including with all layers of Artsakh society”.

According to the political scientist, in this way Pashinyan limits the range of issues that he will have to discuss at the negotiations in the future:

“All sections of the Artsakh society will reject the status of Nagorno-Karabakh within Azerbaijan. In other words, by making this statement, Pashinyan also limits the range of issues that can be included in the document, referring to the fact that the issue of status is not only in the sphere of his powers, but also the authorities of Artsakh and its society”.

According to Grigoryan, the addressee of the statements of Yerevan and Stepanakert is Azerbaijan, as well as the international community:

“One of the main messages of the Armenian side in the upcoming negotiations on the so-called peace agreement may be that Yerevan, by and large, does not have a mandate to sign any decision on the status of NK”.

Touching upon the internal political situation in Armenia and the protest movement of the parliamentary opposition, Tigran Grigoryan stated that this is not the first time when Stepanakert, with its statements, is trying to defuse the situation. Their essence is that “the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict should not be used to achieve domestic political goals”.

Armenia And Kyrgyzstan Remove Entry Requirements

   
BY: 

The nations of Armenia and Kyrgyzstan announced this week that they will be lifting all Covid-related entry requirements for all incoming travelers, effective May 1st, 2022.

Once the changes go into effect on Sunday, travelers won’t have to show any proof of a negative PCR test result or a vaccination certificate in order to enter either country.

According to a local report, Armenia’s Health Minister Anahat Avanesyan stated at a cabinet meeting on Thursday that the country would be scrapping all health-related requirements for international arrivals.

“Since the situation with coronavirus pandemic has been stabilized and the tempos of the spread of the pandemic reduced in world, we have decided to lift some restrictions. The requirement to submit a PCR rapid diagnostic test and vaccination certificate when entering the country through land border and checkpoints in airports has been removed.”

The Ministry of Health for the Kyrgyz Republic also announced that the nation would be removing its testing and proof of vaccination requirements put in place for the pandemic. According to local news, “Reports were heard on the epidemiological situation connected with coronavirus infection in the republic and on the progress of vaccination of the population against coronavirus infection.”

The announcements makes Armenia and Kyrgyzstan the 39th and 40th countries to remove all entry requirements for travelers that were put in place due to the pandemic.

As of May 1st, 2022, all international and domestic travelers arriving to Armenia and Kyrgyzstan won’t need to show any Covid tests or vaccination proof in order to enter the countries. Here’s a review:

  • No negative Covid test result (including PCR and rapid antigen) required at departure or on arrival to Armenia or Kyrgyzstan
  • Proof of vaccination not required for travel
  • No quarantine requirements for incoming travelers

Previously, both nations implemented testing and proof of vaccination requirements for incoming travelers in 2021. After being closed to foreign travelers for most of 2020, Armenia reopened for tourism in March 2021. In order to enter, travelers had to follow a 72-hour testing requirement, a health screening upon arrival, and abide by the local mask mandate in place.

The current proof of Covid vaccination requirement in place will also be scrapped as of May 1st.

Kyrgyzstan began slowly reopening to tourism in late 2020, allowing US and Canadian tourists to visit provided they follow all entry requirements, including testing and proof of vaccination. Non-vaccinated travelers had to show a negative PCR test for entry, and fully vaccinated travelers were exempt from that requirement.

The heart of the Caucasus and located somewhere between Europe, the Middle East, and Asia, Armenia is a beautiful travel destination not-to-be-missed.

From hiking the Caucasus mountains with unforgettable views, visiting centuries-old monasteries, an amazing food culture, and so much more, this little landlocked country will surprise you.

Start your trip in the capital city of Yerevan and get a sense of the local culture and history. The city has plenty of markets, museums, and other attractions to explore that will easily fill your travel itinerary before heading off to explore the mountains and lakes in the countryside.

US and UK travelers can enjoy visa-free travel to Armenia for 180 days in one calendar year. Canadians must apply for a tourist visa before travel to the nation. You can find more information on Armenia’s visa requirements for travelers here.

Due to an ongoing conflict, it is advised by officials to avoid the Nagorno-Karabakh region and the surrounding areas.

Persons from the US, Canada, the UK, and a number of other nations can visit Kyrgyzstan for up to 60 days without a tourist visa. Just make sure that your passport is still valid for at least six months prior to your arrival.

A landlocked nation in Central Asia, Kyrgyzstan is a beautiful destination for travelers looking for outdoor adventures and getting a little off-the-grid. The main port of entry is Bishkek International Airport in the capital city. After spending a few days Bishkek enjoying the museums, a walkable town square, parks, markets, and restaurants, pack up your bags and hop on a marshuka (local bus) to start exploring the impeccable countryside.

Some of the most notable travel destinations in Kyrgyzstan include Song Kul, a crystal clear alpine lake located in the northern region of the country. The area is only accessible in the warmer months, so best to plan your trip here in the summer. Guests can stay with a local family near the lake and sleep in their own yurt, the traditional type of accommodation used by nomads.

The best way to organize your trip to Kyrgyzstan is through CBT (Community-based tourism). You can find more information here at this local tour agency.

Laguna Beach High School recognizes Armenian Genocide Awareness Week

April 29 2022

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Laguna Beach High junior Ashton Azadian has coordinated the return of Armenian Genocide Awareness Week at the campus.

Last year, the High School for the first time in its history recognized the Armenian Genocide by displaying a banner that recognize the killing of Armenians in 1915. Ashton created a new banner that was hung up earlier this week in the quad.

As vice president of the Associated Student Body, Ashton applied for a student grant from the Laguna Beach High School PTA and earned support from Principal Jason Allemann to create a banner emblazoned with the U.S. Flag, the Armenian Flag, and the school’s logo.

“I like the new visual I created because it shows partnership and solidarity as our student body and teachers again come together to recognize the Armenian Genocide this year,” Ashton wrote in an email.

https://www.lagunabeachindy.com/laguna-beach-high-school-recognizes-armenian-genocide-awareness-week/

A weaker Russia provides a vacuum for the EU to exploit in Eurasia

Russia’s increasing isolation on the global stage is creating opportunities for the EU across Eurasia. This is most clear in the South Caucasus, where frustration over Moscow’s actions may allow Brussels to play a key stabilising role.

April 29, 2022 – Taras Kuzio

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on February 24th has resulted in ramifications at various levels. The country’s inability to quickly defeat Ukraine, as President Vladimir Putin expected, has damaged Moscow’s international image of a great power and military force in its Eurasian backyard, as well as vis-à-vis China and NATO.

Russian military weakness is becoming a major factor in the realignment of regional and international attitudes and policies. The Russian army has demonstrably shown weakness in a large number of areas that includes logistics, poor quality technology (such as drones), command and control, corruption, discipline, looting, criminal behaviour and low morale. Russia’s weakness in manpower has perhaps been the most noticeable problem. High numbers of Russian casualties in the war in Ukraine, particularly of elite formations, has led to the recruitment of mercenaries in Syria, South Ossetia, Transnistria and Karabakh. Russia’s peacekeeping contingent in Karabakh has been reduced in size, with some of its troops redeploying to Russian bases in Armenia and subsequently to Ukraine.

Four key changes in attitude

There have been several key changes in regional outlooks in recent months. The first shift can be seen in the EU’s addition of a security dimension to its Eastern Partnership programme, which was created in 2010 for former Soviet states. In November 2021, the European Council on Foreign Relations called for the EU “to be more geopolitically influential in its own neighbourhood” by “developing strategic security partnerships with key neighbours to the east and the south”. This would be done by “creating a security compact for the Eastern Partnership, comprising targeted support for intelligence services, cyber security institutions, and armed forces”.

The EU is becoming a security actor in the Eastern Partnership countries in two ways. Firstly, by brokering peace negotiations in the South Caucasus and, secondly, supplying arms to Ukraine. In July 2021, EU Council President Charles Michel undertook a three-day visit to the South Caucasus, where he met with the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. The diplomatic visit offered an opportunity to increase cooperation between the EU and these three countries and to prepare the agenda for the upcoming Eastern Partnership Summit in December.

In the last four months, the EU has brokered three meetings between Armenia and Azerbaijan in December, February and April. These have produced a breakthrough on border delimitation and demarcation and a peace treaty for a three decade-long conflict between these countries.

Following Russia’s invasion, the EU became a major provider of arms to Ukraine. The EU initially provided 500 million euros, and then another 500 million from the European Peace Facility, “to fund and coordinate EU military assistance and to deliver military (including lethal) equipment to Ukraine”. This is the first time in history that the EU has taken such a step.

The second change involves the Kremlin’s allies in the CSTO (Collective Security Treaty Organisation) and EAEU (Eurasian Economic Union). With the sole exception of Belarus, they have deserted Russia. At numerous UN votes denouncing the invasion of Ukraine, only Minsk has supported Russia. Meanwhile, the other CSTO and EAEU members have abstained. For example, Armenia had always supported Russia on UN votes over Crimea but ultimately chose to abstain over the invasion. Particularly surprising is Kazakhstan, which has refused to support the invasion or recognise the DNR (Donetsk People’s Republic) and LNR (Luhansk People’s Republic). This is despite the fact that Russia led a CSTO “peacekeeping” mission to rescue the regime from a popular uprising. Kazakhstan is sensitive over Russian nationalist demands to what they call “Southern Siberia” (in reality Northern Kazakhstan).

The third change is that countries with frozen conflicts are becoming more willing to make demands towards Russia and assert their independence. For instance, Moldova has called for an end to three decades of “Russian occupation” of Transnistria. With the EU brokering peace talks, Armenia and Azerbaijan are moving ahead to negotiate a peace treaty without Russia’s input.

The fourth and final change is Georgia and Moldova have followed Ukraine in officially applying for membership of the EU. While Russia has always been most virulent in its opposition to NATO enlargement, the Kremlin additionally sought to derail the EU’s Eastern Partnership after Putin was re-elected in 2012. Russian pressure on former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych to not sign an Association Agreement between Kyiv and the EU led to the Euromaidan Revolution and the 2014 crisis.

Regional competition

In the last few years, the EU has begun to develop a security dimension to its Eastern Partnership. In principle, Russia should not be opposed to the EU’s greater involvement in the South Caucasus if this brings stability and prosperity for all sides. In practice, however, Russia is opposed to this change. Russia has reportedly demanded Pashinyan halt further contacts with Brussels and Baku, independent of Russia. Russia does not differentiate between integration, which is on offer under the Eastern Partnership, and membership of the EU. This is because the Kremlin negatively views all forms of intervention by western organisations in its self-declared, exclusive sphere of influence in Eurasia.

The Kremlin also ignores the different approaches of the three South Caucasian states to the EU. While Georgia has applied for EU membership, Armenia is a member of the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union. Azerbaijan does not support EU membership but does back integration. It is not surprising that countries with frozen conflicts do not see Russia as having a good record on peacekeeping operations in Eurasia, as the Kremlin has never attempted to resolve them. Moscow’s preference has always been to freeze conflicts rather than resolve them because this permits Russian forces to maintain a long-term presence. The Kremlin always viewed its so-called peacekeeping forces as forward military bases.

It is therefore little wonder Russia is unhappy when other powers, such as the EU, step in to act as real peacemakers. On April 8th, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said the US and France avoided interaction with Russia on Karabakh questions within the OSCE Minsk Group. In contrast, Fariz Ismailzade, vice rector of Azerbaijan’s ADA State University, said that “What Charles Michel achieves is what OSCE Minsk group failed to achieve in 30 years.”

The OSCE Minsk Group was defunct for many years prior to the Second Karabakh War in 2020. Russia used the passivity of the US and France to become the broker in the 2020 war. The lack of diplomatic progress under the Minsk OSCE process led to military clashes in 2016 and summer 2020 that eventually spilled over into a full-scale, 44-day war. In the end, Azerbaijan defeated Armenia and re-took most of the Azerbaijani lands occupied for nearly three decades.

The EU’s increased involvement in the South Caucasus is good news for both sides. EU-brokered negotiations ignore the defunct OSCE Minsk Group process that the Kremlin wanted to continue to lead. The EU’s support for a bilateral negotiating format throws into doubt Russia’s attempt to increase its influence through its proposed “3+3 Format“. This group would involve Iran, Russia, Turkey and the three regional states. In addition, EU involvement will be balanced in its approach to Azerbaijan and Armenia unlike that of France which, possessing Europe’s largest Armenian diaspora, was often preferential to Yerevan.

Positive change

Michel’s 2021 visit to the South Caucasus came at the same time that Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was becoming more amenable to negotiations over the future of Karabakh. Pashinyan also defended his willingness to accept Azerbaijani sovereignty over seven surrounding districts occupied by Armenia that had never been part of Karabakh.

Following a second meeting with the EU Council’s President Michel and Pashinyan, Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev said, “After the war, our contacts with the European Union became more intense. The EU has also accepted the realities of the post-conflict period.” The EU-brokered meetings led to the adoption of a five-point plan that Azerbaijan had proposed, and Armenia had accepted.

The key areas of progress involve the formation of a bilateral commission for the delimitation and demarcation of the border, including adjusting territories where villages (seven Azerbaijani and one Armenian) were occupied by each side. This would ultimately “establish a stable security situation”.

Both countries’ foreign ministries have been instructed to work on preparing a future peace treaty “which would address all necessary issues”. The peace treaty would include mutual recognition of territorial integrity and inviolability of internationally recognised borders, mutual confirmation of the absence of territorial claims against each other, and legally binding clauses not to raise territorial claims in the future. In accepting Karabakh is a part of Azerbaijan, Yerevan is calling for “guarantees” for the region’s Armenian minority.

Azerbaijan and Armenia both became frustrated with Russia’s approach to the South Caucasus, thereby opening up the possibility for the EU’s involvement. Azerbaijan was disappointed by Russia’s lack of desire to implement a ceasefire agreement. According to Article Four of the Trilateral (Ceasefire) Declaration signed at the end of the Second Karabakh War, Russian peacekeeping units would be deployed to Karabakh in parallel with the withdrawal of all Armenian military, including local “self-defence” forces. Moscow never attempted to make this a reality. Moreover, Russia has provided logistical support to Armenian local units in Karabakh. This is illegal under the ceasefire agreement.

Relations with Moscow soured further when a Russian deputy called for Azerbaijan to be nuked. The outrageous comment by Mikhail Delyagin was typical of the xenophobic rhetoric used on Russian television. In a similar fashion to how Ukraine is frequently described, he called Azerbaijan a Turkish and US “puppet” state.

Deliberate instability

Russia’s anger at being side-lined by the EU is translating into Kremlin-backed destabilisation of the political and security situation in Karabakh. This month, Margarita Simonyan, editor-in-chief of the Kremlin’s propaganda channel RT, called for Russia to annex Karabakh. Her viewpoint is backed by Armenian leaders in Karabakh, who are adamantly opposed to any peace treaty that leaves the region inside Azerbaijan.

Russia’s approach increasingly resembles its earlier support for the creation of fake “people’s republics” controlled by Russian proxies in Georgia’s South Ossetia and the Ukrainian region of the Donbas. In Karabakh, pro-Moscow groups are using the protection of the Russian military to attack Azerbaijani military positions and civilian construction workers operating in the disputed area and the surrounding regions.

Reports in the Russian media directly claim that the goal is to apply the Donbas model to Karabakh. This would involve the distribution of Russian passports to Armenians in Karabakh and its eventual annexation by Russia. If implemented, Russia would officially signal its movement from supporting frozen conflicts to the direct annexation of these disputed territories.

The rights of Armenians in Karabakh can only be addressed within the context of the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, not as a part of Russia or Armenia. In the same manner that the West would not accept Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and attempted annexation of its territories, so too would it not accept violations of international law in the South Caucasus. The “self-determination” of Karabakh would be as illegal as the “self-determination” of Crimea in 2014, as neither Crimea or Kosovo are precedents when it comes to Karabakh.

The West’s reaction to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has strongly demonstrated that the principle of state territorial integrity is still sacrosanct in international law. Putin’s dismissal of this principle has led Russia to international isolation, decoupled from globalisation and exposed to the biggest set of sanctions the world has seen.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has reduced its influence not only globally but also within Eurasia, where its only loyal ally is Belarus. The vacuum generated by the decline of Russian influence is an opportunity for the EU to play an active role in building a security dimension to the Eastern Partnership in regions such as the South Caucasus. Unlike Russia, which has never intended to resolve conflicts, the EU is committed to ending three decades of bitter relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Of course, this should be welcomed by all involved in the region.

Taras Kuzio is a Research Fellow at the Henry Jackson Society think tank in London and Professor in the Department of Political Science, National University of Kyiv Mohyla Academy. He is the author of the recently published book Russian Nationalism and the Russian-Ukrainian War.