Opposition MP: How foreign intelligence services managed to penetrate deep into Armenian military?

panorama.am
Armenia – Feb 12 2022

Armenia MP Tigran Abrahamyan, who represents the opposition With Honor faction, on Saturday reflected on the exposure of a foreign spy ring involving dozens of Armenian military personnel by the National Security Service (NSS).

In a statement on Thursday, the NSS said over 20 servicemen joined the espionage network created by foreign intelligence agencies and received payments for sending classified data on the Armenian army to them. 19 suspects were detained as part of the criminal investigation.

“I would refrain from any assessments for now not to violate the presumption of innocence, but there is a big issue up in the air: how did foreign intelligence services manage to penetrate so deeply into the Armenian armed forces?” Abrahamyan wrote on Facebook.

“The key task of our relevant services is to suppress activities of foreign intelligence services, substantially reduce their opportunities to reach and influence the military.

“Simply put, we still need to understand how such favorable conditions were created for the enemy and why the army and military personnel were so vulnerable. The task should not be simply to eliminate the consequences, but to thoroughly examine the case and its causes.

“Regardless of the details of the proceedings, the authorities benefit from the involvement of the military in such cases, because their pre-selected method of self-justification is to shift the blame onto the army, reserve forces and volunteers, on the principle of ‘what could poor Nikol have done?’,” the MP noted.

Opposition MP: Shushi Declaration poses ‘existential challenge’ to Armenia, Artsakh

panorama.am
Armenia – Feb 14 2022

Armenian MP Andranik Tevanyan, who represents the opposition Hayastan faction, calls for proportionate response to the recent ratification of the Shushi Declaration by the Turkish and Azerbaijani parliaments.

The declaration, signed on June 15, 2021, focuses on Turkish-Azerbaijani defense cooperation and establishing new transport routes. It affirms joint efforts by the two armies “in the face of foreign threats”, and the restructuring and modernization of their armed forces.

“The document poses a challenge to Armenia’s Declaration of Independence, the existence of Armenia and Artsakh,” Tevanyan wrote on Facebook on Monday.

He rejected claims about “positive signals” from Turkey and launch of the Armenia-Turkey normalization process without preconditions as a “bluff”.

“By ratifying the Shushi Declaration, Azerbaijan and Turkey sent the opposite signals and Armenia must adequately respond to them,” the deputy noted.

He also shared the text of a draft statement on the ratification of the Shushi Declaration, which requires parliamentary approval.

“Being provocative and destructive in nature, the Shushi Declaration is unacceptable to the Republic of Armenia. It poses serious challenges to regional and global security, does not contribute to the peaceful development of our region, contradicts the normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations on the basis of “no preconditions” principle and raises serious doubts about the real intentions and conduct of the official Ankara,” reads the statement in part.

Opposition MP: Armenian authorities attempting to shift responsibility for war defeat

panorama.am
Armenia – Feb 14 2022

The Armenian authorities are attempting to shift responsibility for the defeat in the 44-day war to someone else, opposition With Honor faction MP Tigran Abrahamyan said on Monday, referring to the ruling Civil Contract faction’s move to set up a commission of inquiry into the war.

In a joint statement earlier on Friday, the opposition Hayastan (Armenia) and With Honor factions announced their intention to boycott the inquiry into the 2020 war, arguing that the authorities cannot “objectively examine their own actions.”

“It is clear that the commission of inquiry will be engaged in staging the “innocence” of the authorities,” they said.

In Abrahamyan’s words, the Armenian authorities are trying to make an impression that the commission is able to reveal the circumstances of the 44-day war, while the opposition is allegedly not interested in it.

“It is obvious to everyone that the main culprit for what happened is the authorities. Now they are setting up a commission and, in fact, proposing to determine the degree of their own guilt. It’s just a farce, which aims to close the chapter of the 44-day war and shift the blame from the higher echelons of power to the lower echelon, to those who acted as opponents in the postwar period,” the MP told reporters. 

He noted that the issue of investigating the circumstances of the war remains on the opposition agenda, but it will be possible to achieve only after the change of power.

Aliyev’s crimes are limitless: MEP reacts to Azerbaijan’s plans to erase Armenian traces from churches

panorama.am
Armenia – Feb 14 2022

Member of the European Parliament (MEP) Peter van Dalen on Monday reacted to Azerbaijan’s plans to erase Armenian traces from churches, calling on the European Parliament to condemn the “cultural genocide”.

“Aliyev’s crimes are limitless! Azerbaijan announces plans to erase Armenian traces from churches. The ⁦European Parliament must condemn this cultural genocide,” the MEP tweeted.

Azerbaijan’s government on Feb. 3 announced plans to erase Armenian inscriptions from religious sites in areas in and around Artsakh, that fell under Baku’s control in the 2020 war.

How The West Can Leverage Azeri Influence

Kyiv Post, Ukraine
Feb 10 2022

In the late 1990s, the former Carter administration Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski, characterised Azerbaijan and Ukraine as “geopolitical pivots” that were key nodes of regional power configuration, due to their strategic location on the post-Cold War European fault lines.

Today’s developments in and around the borders of these countries show they still continue to play a pivotal role in regional geopolitics, especially in the context of deterioration of the post-Cold War European security system. As Brzezinski argued, the future of Azerbaijan and Ukraine will be crucial in defining what Russia might or might not become, and thus the West ought to seek closer engagement with these two Eastern Partnership countries.

However, the Biden administration’s recent unbalanced approach to Armenia, a Russian ally, and Azerbaijan cast a shadow on the U.S.’ strategic partnership with the latter.

The American President’s invitation to Armenia to participate in the Summit for Democracy last December, while omitting Azerbaijan and Turkey, was viewed as a needless gesture at a time of a deepening security crisis in Europe, with Russia putting forward claims to spheres of influence and the West refusing to accept it. At the same time, U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan’s meeting with his Armenian counterpart Armen Grigoryan in Washington on December 15, to discuss developments on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border, provoked Baku’s ire as the Azerbaijani side was not offered a similar opportunity.

President Aliyev said pro-Armenian bias in Washington’s South Caucasus policy is its own business, but it could have repercussions for bilateral relations with Azerbaijan.  

A month later, ironically, it was Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan who jumped on the Russian bandwagon to send troops to Kazakhstan, as part of the Russia-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) mission to clamp down on anti-government protests in major cities.

It should be noted that Pashinyan, who took power on the back of popular protests in 2018, characterised the civil unrest in Kazakhstan as externally orchestrated. According to Armenia’s leader, the unrest was sufficient to trigger Article 4 of the CSTO charter on mutual assistance.

By contributing to Russia’s efforts to prop up an authoritarian regime in the neighbourhood, Yerevan, on the one hand, showed its cards in the deepening divide between the democratic West and authoritarian Russia. As part of this “Holy Alliance” with Russia and Belarus, Armenia showed the lengths to which it is willing to go to preserve authoritarian stability in CSTO countries.

On the other hand, Armenia’s close involvement in the Central Asian nation – dubbed as ‘a mere pawn in Russia’s Kazakhstan strategy’ – amounted to nothing less than to serve Moscow’s neo-imperial ambitions in the post-Soviet space, that recently became much clearer in the Kremlin’s ultimatum to the U.S. and NATO.

Yerevan`s support to the Kremlin`s overseas adventures is not new: back in February 2019, the Armenian side dispatched military servicemen, as part of the broad Russian engagement, to Syria. Usually ignored by Western observers, that move, too, happened under Pashinyan, whose coming to power in 2018 was generally hailed as a new, more pro-Western and less pro-Russian direction in Armenia`s foreign policy.

Compared to Armenia, Azerbaijan’s Russia policy has so far been more nuanced, giving it a bigger margin of error with regard to its dealings with the northern neighbour.

With a relatively strong economy and multifaceted alliances, Baku proactively participates in the geopolitical transformation of the wider Black Sea-Caspian Sea basin, where its arch-ally Turkey has also recently been shoring up its economic and military profile.

In an interview to local TV on January 12, President Aliyev, hinting at Russia’s notorious security proposals, claimed Azerbaijan, based on its own strength, is ready for any possibilities in case the current international relations system collapses.

Two days later, amid growing tensions around Ukraine’s borders, he visited Kyiv on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of its independence and met with his counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky. In a joint statement after the meeting, the two leaders expressed mutual support on matters of sovereignty and territorial integrity and that both would work to protect their internationally recognized borders.

In this context, Azerbaijan’s calculated support to Ukraine gained a new meaning as the other pro-Western in-between countries, especially Georgia, has largely laid low amid the increasing uncertainty around Ukraine’s borders. Except for Foreign Minister David Zalkaliani’s tweet expressing solidarity with Kyiv, Georgian leadership has so far shied away from open support to Ukraine’s cause.

The resolution adopted by the Georgian Parliament on February 1 interestingly omitted “Russian aggression”, prompting opposition figures to accuse the incumbent regime of turning a blind eye to what is happening to Tbilisi’s alleged closest friend. 

Expectedly, Azerbaijan’s cautious support to Ukraine in a time of an acute security crisis and its capacity to play a pivotal role in the aftermath of a potential war – whether it be on energy supplies, connectivity projects or diplomatic linkages – have not gone unnoticed in Western capitals.

The EU has already started negotiations with Baku for potential emergency gas deliveries, in case Russia restricts gas supplies to Europe as a punitive measure against Western sanctions.

On January 30, EU foreign policy chief Joseph Borrell said the EU was coordinating its actions with partners such as the U.S., Qatar, and Azerbaijan to enhance its resilience against possible supply shocks emanating from Russia.

On February 4, EU Commissioner for Neighbourhood and Enlargement Oliver Varhelyi and Commissioner for Energy Kadri Simson visited Baku to discuss the possibility of ramping up gas deliveries to Europe. Attending the annual Southern Gas Corridor Corridor Advisory Council meeting, Commissioner Simson called the project “a continuing success story”, contributing to the EU’s energy security in increasingly uncertain market conditions.

In his meeting with Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov, Commissioner Varhelyi said the EU counts on Azerbaijan as a reliable partner on energy supplies and wishes the latter will consider increasing the amount of gas deliveries to the EU and Western Balkans in the near future. 

Azerbaijan has started to directly send its natural gas to European markets since December 2020. The Trans-Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) as part of the Southern Gas Corridor brought more than 8 billion cubic metres of Azerbaijani gas from the Shah Deniz-2 field in the Caspian Sea to Greece, Italy, and Bulgaria in 2021, offering an alternative and reliable source of supply for EU members.

According to President Aliyev, Baku will export about 19 billion cubic metres of gas in 2022. More than 8 billion cubic metres of that amount will be directed to Turkey and a little more than 7 billion cubic metres will be sold to Italy.

In an interview  given to Spain’s EFE news outlet in October, Azerbaijani President reiterated Baku is ready to boost natural gas exports to the EU but needs to negotiate a new agreement because “you must first sell gas and then produce it”.

Although the amount the Azerbaijani side could offer is in no way enough to fill the demand gap on its own, it could still provide a meaningful alternative for the EU’s energy diversification policy.  

Against this background, the EU’s decision to allocate a financial package worth €2 billion to Azerbaijan to keep the parity with the amount of investments in Armenia within the recently declared Economic and Investment Plan, was a crucial step forward and similar moves by the U.S. administration would add a positive tone to U.S.-Azerbaijan relations in hard times for European security.

 

Rusif Huseynov is the Director of the Topchubashov Center, a think tank in Baku, Azerbaijan. He tweets as @RusifHuseynov2.

Wes Mahammad Mammadov is a research fellow at the Topchubashov Center. He tweets as @im_mammadov.

Out-migration in Armenia increasing

EurasiaNet.org
Feb 10 2022
Ani Mejlumyan Feb 10, 2022
Boarding at Yerevan’s Zvartnots Airport. (iStock/Getty)

Nearly 44,000 more Armenians left the country in 2021 than returned, a record figure for the last several years, according to newly released official data. 

The theme of out-migration has been a hot topic and highly politicized issue in the country, and the recent numbers confirm what many believed: that many more Armenians are leaving – in particular for migrant labor abroad – than coming home. 

In total, 43,874 more Armenians left than entered the country in 2021. That reversed a trend of three straight years when the country recorded positive balances: 15,317 in 2018, 10,506 in 2019, and 12,092 in 2020. 

The migration figures did not come as a surprise, as Armenians struggled both with a declining economy and a deteriorating security situation following the 2020 defeat in the war with Azerbaijan. On top of that, loosening COVID pandemic restrictions meant many people who had wanted to leave before that were finally able to. 

“Out-migration for employment to Russia averages 60-70,000 a year,” the head of the country’s Migration Service, Armen Ghazaryan, told RFE/RL. “Those people didn’t go anywhere in 2020 and naturally we had to have these people leave in 2021.”

The figures indicated that many Armenians, as expected, did return in the last quarter of 2021. In the first three quarters of the year about 103,000 more Armenians left the country than returned, 64,000 of those in the first quarter alone. 

Migration figures in Armenia tend to track perceptions of economic and political stability. Following a 1998 attack on the country’s parliament that killed the country’s prime minister, the speaker of parliament and six other lawmakers, net migration topped 60,000 in 2000 and 2001. Following the 2008 global financial crisis, the figures topped 40,000 in both 2010 and 2011. 

But the current government, which took power in the 2018 “Velvet Revolution,” had made it a point of pride that more Armenians who had sought their fortune abroad were returning home. 

There are no precise numbers of how many people actually live in Armenia. The last census was conducted in 2011, and counted 3,018,854 people. The country was supposed to conduct another census in 2020 – the law requires one every 10 years – but it was delayed because of the pandemic. The state Statistics Committee has been testing a system to conduct an online census in 2022. 

The national police also track data of people who register or unregister at addresses; in 2020, 33,203 people unregistered from their addresses, and that number jumped to 38,932 in 2021. Not everyone who moves abroad reports when they leave an address. Nevertheless, that data still offers a more precise picture of people who have definitely left the country, said Anna Hovhannisyan of the Armenia office of the UN Population Fund in an interview with RFE/RL.

 

Ani Mejlumyan is a reporter based in Yerevan.

Armenian businesses see both opportunity and threat from opening of Turkish border

EurasiaNet.org
Feb 10 2022
Arshaluis Mgdesyan Feb 10, 2022
The border has been closed since 1993. (Alexei Fateev / Alamy)

As Armenia and Turkey progress on normalizing relations and opening their shared border, businesses in Armenia are watching the process with a mixture of fear and anticipation. 

While some businesspeople see the opening of the Turkish border as a step toward gaining access to foreign markets, others worry that they will drown in a flood of cheap, relatively high-quality Turkish products. 

Armenia’s National Security Council recently commissioned a study, “Opportunities and Challenges for Turkey’s Lifting of the Blockade of Armenia,” from the Amberd Research Center of the Armenian State Economic University. The study has not yet been published but some of its conclusions were made available to Eurasianet. 

According to the report’s projections, opening the border could increase Turkish exports to Armenia by 65 percent, and increase Armenian exports the other way by up to 42 percent. While the report notes that opening would reduce logistics costs and enable access to new markets, it concludes that the risks to Armenian industry are “very high” and that competition with cheaper Turkish goods is “a matter of national security for us.”

Turkish products have long been widely available in Armenia, but they must be imported via a third country, usually Georgia. The border between Turkey and Armenia has been closed since 1993, during the first Armenia-Azerbaijan war, when Turkey unilaterally shut it to protest Armenians’ capture of Azerbaijani territory outside Nagorno-Karabakh.

The talks now are aimed at reopening that border, which would greatly facilitate bilateral trade and lead to even lower costs for Turkish goods. While Armenian consumers would benefit, business stands to suffer from the heightened competition.

Armenia-Turkey trade is already heavily one-sided – in 2019, bilateral trade amounted to $270 million, all but $2 million of which was Turkish imports to Armenia. But the Amberd report found that Armenia does have export opportunities in the other direction. Armenia now exports raw fur, leather, and scrap metal to Turkey, and could export more products, including animals and freshwater fish.

“However, when building economic relations with a neighboring country, the main risk concerns Turkey’s cheap and high-quality agricultural and industrial products, which may flood the Armenian market. In this regard, it is very important to take into account the issue of Armenia’s food security,” the report says.

Also complicating decision-making are the heightened emotions associated with Turkey, and the deep political polarization in Armenia. In 2020, Armenia suffered a devastating military defeat to Azerbaijan, which was heavily backed by Turkey. That exacerbated Armenians’ long-standing fears of Turkey – which committed genocide against ethnic Armenians in 1915, which Ankara continues to officially deny – which Armenia’s political opposition exploits, painting any direct contact with Turkey as treason.

A recent survey found that 90 percent of Armenians see Turkey as their country’s greatest political threat, and 68 percent as its greatest economic threat. Asked about how they saw the possibility of open borders and renewed transport ties with Turkey, 35 percent saw it as definitely or somewhat positive, while 53 percent perceived it was definitely or somewhat negative.

Some Armenian economists look warily to their north, where Turkish products dominate the Georgian market. In 2019, Turkey exported approximately $1.5 billion in goods to Georgia, but imported only $300 million, according to official Turkish statistics

Armenian business owners fear a repeat of that scenario, said Alexandr Grigoryan, an economist at the American University of Armenia and part of a group of scholars that has been carrying out research into Armenian businesspeople’s expectations vis-a-vis trade with Turkey. 

Armenian business fears “the threat of economic expansion from Turkey if the Turkish state begins to purposefully apply such an economic policy,” Grigoryan told Eurasianet. “In the case of such developments, the Armenian businessmen we interviewed expect the support of the Armenian state.”

Given the comparatively small size of Armenia’s economy, its importance to Turkey is likely to be local rather than national, said Guven Sak, the managing director of the Turkish think tank TEPAV. Armenia “is not a place that can be a source of growth for the Turkish economy on a national scale” but it could be “extremely beneficial” as a regional development project for border cities, Sak told Turkey’s Anadolu Agency. 

The Armenian government has not yet announced any plans to protect the country’s businesses in the event the Turkish border opens, and an Economy Ministry spokesperson told Eurasianet that it had not carried out any projections of possible impacts.

Following the 2020 war, Armenia imposed a ban on Turkish imports of consumer goods in protest of Turkey’s heavy backing of Azerbaijan. 

The import ban was lifted at the beginning of 2021, as Yerevan and Ankara began to take steps toward normalizing relationsappointing envoys and carrying out their first bilateral meetings in more than a decade. 

Direct flights between the two countries began on February 2, carried out by both FlyOne Armenia and Turkey’s Pegasus Air. There had been no direct flights since 2020 when AtlasGlobal, the last airline to fly the route, went bankrupt. 

The envoys met in Moscow in January and are scheduled to meet a second time in Vienna on February 26. Diplomatic progress is sure to be slow and there is no timetable for when, or even if, the border will open.

Armenian officials have generally tried to accentuate the potential gains from freer cross-border trade. 

“Maybe in a particular segment of the economy some goods will lose their competitiveness, but it will make you think about what new opportunities appear after the opening of the border,” Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said during an online press conference on January 24. 

A member of parliament from the ruling Civil Contract Party and close Pashinyan associate Khachatur Sukiasyan told reporters that Armenia could gain medical tourism from eastern Turkey.  

“I have already called on the medical centers of Yerevan and the city of Gyumri to improve their technologies and medical services, which, when the border is opened, will be used by Turkish citizens living at a distance of up to 200 kilometers from the Armenian border, because these services are not developed there,” Sukiasyan told reporters on January 17. 

Sukiasyan’s family is in fact already benefiting: His brother is a co-founder and board member of FlyOne Armenia, one of the carriers that started flying the Yerevan-Istanbul route. 

 

Arshaluis Mgdesyan is a journalist based in Yerevan.

Armenia Says Dismantles Foreign Spy Network

Barron’s
Feb 10 2022

February 10, 2022

Armenia has arrested 19 of its nationals who were collecting intelligence about Yerevan’s armed forces for a foreign spy network, the secret service said Thursday.

One of those arrested said in footage released by the secret service that he had allegedly spied for Azerbaijan, with whom Armenia’s long-simmering conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh flared anew into war late last year.

The military intelligence department of Armenia’s national security service said it had “arrested 19 people suspected of high treason, some of whom confessed.”

It said that “a foreign secret service has set up a network that involved Armenian nationals, employees of the country’s armed forces.”

It added: “They had access to classified documents and were collecting information about Armenian military facilities, weapons, and personnel.”

The statement gave no further detail.

In autumn 2020, the protracted territorial dispute over Azerbaijan’s Armenian-populated Nagorno-Karabakh region flared into an all-out war that claimed more than 6,500 lives.

The 44-day war ended with a Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement under which Armenia ceded swathes of territory it had controlled for decades.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev met in December twice, in Moscow and Brussels, for rare face-to-face talks to discuss normalisation.

Ethnic Armenian separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan as the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, and an ensuing armed conflict claimed around 30,000 lives.

mkh-im/lc

 

Peacekeepers should remain in Karabakh until end of conflict — Armenia’s Security Council

TASS, Russia
Feb 10 2022
Until there is a solution, the presence of the peacekeepers is necessary, Security Council Secretary Armen Grigoryan noted

YEREVAN, February 10. /TASS/. Armenia thinks that Russia’s peacekeeping contingent should remain in Nagorno-Karabakh until the conflict is completely resolved, Armenian Security Council Secretary Armen Grigoryan said at a briefing on Thursday.

“We think that until the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is resolved, the peacekeepers should be there in order to find a long-term solution. Until there is a solution, the presence of the peacekeepers is necessary,” he stated.

In the fall of 2020, the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh escalated with armed clashes occurring on the disputed territory. On November 9, 2020, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a joint statement on a complete ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh. According to the document, the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides would maintain the positions that they had held, a number of regions would be controlled by Azerbaijan, and Russian peacekeepers would be deployed to the region along the line of engagement and the Lachin corridor.

Armenia arrests 19 suspected spies as it dismantles foreign spy network

Al-Arabiya, UAE
Feb 10 2022
AFP

Armenia has arrested 19 of its nationals who were collecting intelligence about Yerevan’s armed forces for a foreign spy network, the secret service said Thursday.

One of those arrested said in footage released by the secret service that he had allegedly spied for Azerbaijan, with whom Armenia’s long-simmering conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh flared anew into war late last year.

The military intelligence department of Armenia’s national security service said it had “arrested 19 people suspected of high treason, some of whom confessed.”

It said that “a foreign secret service has set up a network that involved Armenian nationals, employees of the country’s armed forces.”

It added: “They had access to classified documents and were collecting information about Armenian military facilities, weapons, and personnel.”

The statement gave no further detail.

In autumn 2020, the protracted territorial dispute over Azerbaijan’s Armenian-populated Nagorno-Karabakh region flared into an all-out war that claimed more than 6,500 lives.

The 44-day war ended with a Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement under which Armenia ceded swathes of territory it had controlled for decades.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev met in December twice, in Moscow and Brussels, for rare face-to-face talks to discuss normalization.

Ethnic Armenian separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan as the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, and an ensuing armed conflict claimed around 30,000 lives.