‘Aurora’s Sunrise’ Animated Doc on Armenian Genocide to Hit North American Theaters

Inna Sahakyan’s harrowing film tells the story of Aurora Mardiganian, who escaped the Armenian Genocide before embarking on an odyssey that took her to the heights of Hollywood stardom.

By AWN Staff Editor | Wednesday, at 12:23pm
In 2D, CG, Films, People | ANIMATIONWorld, Headline News | Geographic Region: All

Bars Media Films announced its first-ever animated feature, Aurora’s Sunrise, will soon have its North American theatrical release, opening Aug. 11 in New York City at Village East by Angelika and New Plaza Cinema, Aug. 18 in Los Angeles at Laemmle Glendale, and Sept. 1 in Toronto at Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema, with director Inna Sahakyan in-person for Q&As at all three. The film will also roll out in other cities across the U.S. and Canada throughout August and the Fall.

The feature was the first-ever animated documentary film made in Armenia and was Armenia’s Official Selection for 95th Academy Awards for Best International Feature Film. Directed by Inna Sahakyan, Aurora’s Sunrise premiered in competition at Annecy IAFF2022 and then became a festival favorite, winning more than 10 awards, including the Asia Pacific Screen Awards 2022 for Best Animated Film, Movies that Matter 2023 Audience Award and Special Mention Winner, Audience Favorites at IDFA 2022, Audience Awards at Animation is Film 2022 and FIFDH Geneva International Film Festival and Forum on Human Rights 2023 for Grand Prix, among others.

Read AWN’s interview with the director: ‘Aurora’s Sunrise’ Marks a New Era in Armenian Storytelling

In 1915, as WWI raged on, the Ottoman Empire singled out its entire Armenian population for destruction. Only 14 years old at the time, Aurora Mardiganian’s story was tragically relatable. Forced onto a death march towards the Syrian desert, she lost her entire family before being kidnapped and sold into sexual slavery. Four years later, through luck and extraordinary courage, she escaped to New York, where her story became a media sensation. Starring as herself in the silent epic Auction of Souls, an early Hollywood blockbuster, Aurora became the face of one of the largest and most successful charity campaigns in American history, as one of the first women activists fighting against the injustices of war. With a blend of vivid animation, interviews with Aurora herself, and 18 minutes of surviving re-discovered footage from her lost silent epic, Aurora’s Sunrise revives a forgotten story of survival, hope, and the endurance of the human spirit.

“The Armenian genocide is the enduring pain of my nation,” said director Inna Sahakyan. “I was afraid of telling stories that only confirmed Armenians as a nation of victims with no historical agency and nothing but tragedy running through our veins. That is, until I stumbled upon an interview with Aurora Mardiganian while going through archival interviews with Armenian Genocide survivors at the Zoryan Institute. Through her words and expressions, an incredible but ordinary heroism shone: this woman survived a genocide but refused to be a victim. This is the character I wanted to build in Aurora’s Sunrise, resilient, powerful and heartwarming all at once.”

Source: Bars Media Films

Armenpress: Azerbaijan fired in the direction of the Armenian positions in Tegh village. One soldier injured

 09:45,

YEREVAN, JULY 12, ARMENPRESS։ On July 12, at 05:30 a.m. Azerbaijani armed forces opened fire in the direction of the Armenian positions in Tegh village, as a result of which an Armenian serviceman was injured, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Armenia.

The health condition of the serviceman is assessed as satisfactory, his life is not in danger.

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 07/11/2023

                                        Tuesday, 
Blinken, Pashinian Discuss Armenian-Azeri Talks
U.S. - U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Armenia's Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian meet on the sidelines of a UN General Assembly session, New York, 
September 22, ,2022.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian discussed with U.S. Secretary of State Antony 
Blinken Armenia’s peace talks with Azerbaijan and Baku’s continuing blockade of 
Nagorno-Karabakh in a phone call on Tuesday.
“The interlocutors reviewed the situation in the region, ongoing negotiations on 
the peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan, necessary steps to ensure the 
rights and security of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, including the need for 
a Baku-Stepanakert dialogue with international involvement,” the Armenian 
government’s press office said in a statement on the call.
“Prime Minister Pashinian referred to the deepening humanitarian crisis in 
Nagorno-Karabakh resulting from Azerbaijan's illegal blockade of the Lachin 
Corridor and steps necessary for overcoming it,” it added without elaborating.
Blinken and the U.S. State Department did not immediately issue statements on 
the conversation. It took place five days after U.S. National Security Adviser 
Jake Sullivan met with Armen Grigorian, the secretary of Armenia’s Security 
Council, in Washington. Sullivan did not comment on that meeting.
Both Blinken and Sullivan held late last month trilateral meetings with the 
Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers during their fresh round of 
U.S.-mediated peace talks focusing on the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty. 
Blinken said on June 29 that despite “further progress” made by the two 
ministers “there remains hard work to be done to try to reach a final agreement.”
Speaking in Baku on Tuesday, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev stressed the 
importance of Armenia’s recognition of Azerbaijani sovereignty over 
Nagorno-Karabakh which was declared by Pashinian in May.
“Now, however, the time has come to put those words to paper,” Aliyev said, 
referring to the peace deal currently discussed by Baku and Yerevan.
Opposition Lawmaker Ousted From Armenian Parliament Post
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia - A session of the National Assembly, Yerevan, .
The Armenian opposition accused Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian of dealing 
another blow to pluralism and democracy on Tuesday after his party ousted the 
last remaining opposition head of a standing parliament committee.
Lawmakers representing the Civil Contract party voted to dismiss Taguhi 
Tovmasian as chairwoman of the National Assembly’s committee on human rights 
after a brief session. The vote was boycotted by their colleagues from the 
opposition Hayastan and Pativ Unem alliances.
Civil Contract’s Hovik Aghazarian was the only parliament deputy who spoke 
during the session. He repeated the ruling party’s complaints that Tovmasian did 
not attend most meetings of the Armenian parliament’s leadership and did not 
stop “hate speech” when her committee discussed on April 4 candidacies for the 
then vacant post of the state human rights defender.
Edgar Ghazarian, the opposition candidate for the post, enraged pro-government 
lawmakers with his claim that the 2018 “velvet revolution” that brought 
Pashinian to power was in fact a “Turkish-Azerbaijani revolution.” They shouted 
abuse and threats at Ghazarian during the meeting chaired by Tovmasian.
One of those lawmakers, Artur Hovannisian, pledged to “cut the tongues and ears 
of anyone” who would make disparaging comments about the regime change. 
Pashinian’s party did not criticize his behavior.
Tovmasian, who is affiliated with Pativ Unem, insisted that she did nothing 
wrong on April 4. In a written statement, she also argued that the parliamentary 
statutes did not require her to attend meetings of the National Assembly’s 
Council consisting of speaker Alen Simonian, his deputies as well as the 
committee chairpersons.
Tovmasian again claimed that Pashinian personally ordered his loyalists to strip 
her of the parliamentary post in retaliation against her defection from his 
political team following Armenia’s defeat in the 2020 war with Azerbaijan.
“As you can see, any dissent in Armenia is strangled by imprisonment and 
dismissal,” added the former journalist and newspaper editor.
Armenia - Taguhi Tovmasian (right) and other deputies from Pativ Unem bloc 
attend a parliamernt session, September 14, 2021.
Pativ Unem voiced strong support for Tovmasian, saying that she acted 
professionally on April 4 in the face of her pro-government colleagues’ 
“hooligan behavior.” The official grounds for her dismissal are “completely 
baseless and illegal,” the opposition bloc charged in a statement.
Hayastan also condemned Tovmasian’s dismissal. “The government cannot put a 
straitjacket on the opposition; that means totalitarianism, dictatorship, 
tyranny,” said one of its senior parliamentarians, Artsvik Minasian.
Armenian law reserves a number of leadership positions in the parliament for the 
opposition minority. Tovmasian’s ouster left the opposition without any such 
posts.
Hayastan’s Ishkhan Saghatelian and Vahe Hakobian were ousted as deputy speaker 
and chairman of the parliament committee on economic affairs respectively in 
July 2022 after weeks of anti-government protests organized by Hayastan and 
Pativ Unem. Another Hayastan deputy, Armen Gevorgian, immediately resigned as 
chairman of a committee on “Eurasian integration” in protest.
Both opposition blocs made clear on Tuesday that they will not nominate a new 
head of the human rights committee. Civil Contract likewise said that it will 
not install Tovmasian’s successor.
Nevertheless, the ruling party will effectively gain control of her post even in 
the absence of a new committee chair. In line with the parliamentary statutes, 
the human rights panel will be run, in an acting capacity, by Rustam Bakoyan, 
its deputy chairman affiliated with Civil Contract.
Last year, Bakoyan’s former wife accused him of systematically beating her, 
publicizing purported photographs of injuries sustained by her. Bakoyan, who 
denied the allegations, was not prosecuted or even censured by Pashinian’s party.
Government Vows To Tackle ‘Police Violence Against Lawyers’
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia - Interior Minister Vahe Ghazarian speaks in the parliament, Yerevan, 
March 1, 2023.
Armenia’s Interior Ministry and national bar association agreed on Tuesday to 
set up a joint working group tasked with protecting lawyers against violent 
police actions.
The agreement was announced after hundreds of lawyers again went on a one-day 
strike and marched to the ministry headquarters in Yerevan to show support for 
their colleagues allegedly beaten up by police officers.
Interior Minister Vahe Ghazarian received the leaders of the Armenian Chamber of 
Advocates, which organized the protest. One of them, Ara Zohrabian, was 
satisfied with the meeting that lasted for less than an hour.
Zohrabian said they received assurances that “there will no such instances 
involving lawyers anymore.” Lawyers assaulted by police officers will now be 
able to swiftly appeal to the joint commission that will comprise three Interior 
Ministry officials and three lawyers, he told journalists.
Neither Ghazarian nor the ministry’s press office made any statements to that 
effect immediately after the meeting.
The protests began late last month after one attorney, Karen Alaverdian, claimed 
to have been subjected to “undue physical force” while trying to stop several 
policemen kicking and punching his client at a Yerevan police station.
Armenia - Lawyers protest outside the Interior Ministry in Yerevan, July 11, 
2023.
Armenia’s Investigative Committee denied the allegations on June 13, saying that 
Alaverdian himself shoved and even hit the officers in a bid to free the 
criminal suspect. The law-enforcement agency charged him with “hooliganism” and 
obstruction of legitimate police actions. The Chamber of Advocates voiced 
support for Alaverdian and demanded a proper investigation into the incident.
Alaverdian revealed on Tuesday that two senior officers working at the police 
department of Yerevan’s central administrative district have been indicted by 
another law-enforcement body, the National Security Service (NSS), and suspended 
as a result. He welcomed the development.
Two other lawyers claimed to have been ill-treated at another Yerevan police 
station in February while representing a teenage criminal suspect. Their 
allegations were likewise denied by the Armenian police and the Investigative 
Committee.
The protesting lawyers say that the national police chief, Karlen Hovannisian, 
is personally responsible for the alleged violence. More than 500 of them have 
signed a petition demanding his dismissal.
According to Zohrabian, Hovannisian also attended the interior minister’s 
meeting with the Chamber of Advocates leadership. The latter insisted on 
Hovannisian’s resignation during and after the meeting.
Azerbaijan Again Blocks Medical Evacuations From Karabakh
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia - A Red Cross vehicle is seen in Syunik province, June 1, 2023.
Azerbaijan has again banned the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) 
from evacuating seriously ill persons from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia.
Azerbaijan’s state border guard service said on Tuesday that it made the 
decision because Karabakh residents returning home from Armenia repeatedly tried 
last week to “smuggle” cigarettes, mobile phone screens, gasoline and other 
items. The ICRC failed to stop such “illegal actions,” it said, adding that the 
Azerbaijani checkpoint controversially set up in the Lachin corridor in April 
will remain completely closed until the end of its inquiry into the alleged 
smuggling attempts.
The ICRC has transported hundreds of Karabakh patients to Armenian hospitals 
since Baku blocked last December commercial traffic through Karabakh’s sole land 
link with Armenia. Only Red Cross vehicles as well as convoys of Russian 
peacekeepers were able to pass through the road.
The ICRC said later on Tuesday that four of its hired drivers “tried to 
transport some commercial goods in their own vehicles which were temporarily 
displaying the ICRC emblem.”
“These individuals were not ICRC staff members and their service contracts were 
immediately terminated by the ICRC,” it added in a statement.
"Our work along the Lachin corridor is always strictly humanitarian. This 
essential work, which has allowed more than 600 patients to be evacuated for 
medical care and for medical supplies, food, baby formula and other essentials 
to reach health care facilities and families, must be allowed to continue.”
Baku already blocked the medical evacuations in late April and on June 15. They 
most recently resumed on June 25.
Karabakh’s leadership did not immediately react to the latest Azerbaijani ban. 
The Armenian Foreign Ministry expressed concern about it, saying that “more 
international efforts and actions are needed to lift the 7-month blockade of 
Nagorno-Karabakh.”
“It is obvious that Azerbaijan is simply looking for excuses to finally close 
the only way through which medicines and other medical supplies were brought to 
Karabakh,” Artur Harutiunian, a senior Karabakh lawmaker, told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
Service.
Harutiunian argued that family members accompanying Karabakh patients on their 
way back from Armenia did not try to smuggle weapons or drugs. He said they only 
carried things that are running out in Karabakh due to the Azerbaijani blockade.
Baku further tightened the blockade on June 15, banning the Russian peacekeepers 
from shipping limited amounts of food to Karabakh. It has also been blocking 
Armenia’s electricity and gas supplies to the Armenian-populated region.
Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

Azerbaijan violates the ceasefire in Artsakh

 09:52,

STEPANAKERT, JULY 12, ARMENPRESS։ On July 12, at 09:00 a.m., the Azerbaijani armed forces violated the ceasefire in the Shushi region by using an 82 mm mortar and other weapons, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Artsakh.

The ceasefire violation was reported to the command of the Russian peacekeeping troops.

Azerbaijan’s claims were false and manipulative. Armenian MFA welcomes the decision of International Court of Justice

 10:17,

YEREVAN, JULY 11, ARMENPRESS. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia welcomes the Order of the International Court of Justice of 6 July 2023, the complete text of which was communicated to the parties on .

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the MFA Armenia, the Court unanimously reaffirmed its 22 February 2023 Order obligating Azerbaijan, pending the final decision in the case, in accordance with its obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination “to take all measures at its disposal to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions”.

The Court unanimously confirmed with its 6 July 2023 legally binding Order that the 22 February 2023 Order “applies without limitation” to the checkpoint established by Azerbaijan and the existence and operation of the Azerbaijani checkpoint on the Lachin Corridor plausibly constitutes racial discrimination.

It is important to highlight that the Court considered that “the tenuous situation between the Parties confirms the need for effective implementation” of that Order, which was taken to prevent an imminent risk of irreparable harm to ethnic Armenians’ rights under the CERD and which has been and is still being intentionally disregarded by Azerbaijan.

Thus, the 6 July 2023 Order of the Court reaffirms Azerbaijan’s international legal obligation to take all measures at its disposal to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions, and therefore to immediately cease the operation of its checkpoint, as it unquestionably impedes the rights under the CERD of Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh.

It can be stated that the 6 July 2023 Order of the Court once again proves that Azerbaijan’s assertions of its compliance with the Order of the Court of 22 February 2023 were false and manipulative.

We also call on other international actors, and the UN Security Council in particular, to take all steps to ensure the immediate and effective implementation of the Court’s Order by Azerbaijan.

Turkey still has resources to resort to deceptive maneuvering actions between Russia and the West – Turkologist

 10:19,

YEREVAN, 11 JULY, ARMENPRESS. At this moment, we are witnessing the emphatic diplomatic behavior of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the last years of his tenure. Turkey is either getting closer to Russia or a little closer to the West. This is also characteristic of Turkey’s comprehensive foreign policy of the last period. They conduct this policy with the intention that Ankara will get the dividends it seeks for a long time.

In an interview with ARMENPRESS, Ruben Safrastyan, Turkologist-academic, Counselor of Director of the Institute of Oriental Studies of the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia, expressed said this, referring to the changes in the relations between Turkey and the West.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg announced that Turkey agreed to confirm Sweden’s membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and Turkish media noted that after that the Turkish government received full support from the West in lifting sanctions and liberalizing the visa regime.

“The supply of modernized American F-16 aircraft is also extremely important for Turkey. That issue was raised again two days ago during a telephone conversation with US President Joe Biden organized by Erdogan’s initiative, and probably the Turkish leader received certain promises. The financial and economic support of the West is certainly important for Turkey, especially since after the devastating earthquake, the Turkish economy and especially the financial system is in a very difficult condition,” Safrastyan said.

According to him, the situation of Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan has major role in that matter. It should not be forgotten that he received higher education and has experience in the USA and has been involved in the works carried out with NATO for many years. Fidan has a more pro-Western mentality, in contrast to Çavuşoğlu, and represents the circle of the Turkish political elite that is more pro-American.

According to Safrastyan, Ankara once again raised the issue of EU membership, especially since the process has been suspended by the EU in recent years. If Turkey supports Sweden in becoming a member of NATO, the latter has promised to support Turkey in European integration, although it is a rather difficult and long process. Regardless of everything, Erdogan is trying to turn the situation to its advantage in return for once again showing reverence to the West and realizing his long-standing goals.

Safrastyan reflected on the statement of German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, according to which Sweden’s membership in NATO cannot be connected with Turkey’s European integration, and emphasized that the EU will never allow this issue to become a subject of negotiation.

“This problem is related to fundamental phenomena. The EU has set demands for Turkey, and only after fulfilling them, the latter can become a member of the European Union, while Ankara has no intention of fulfilling those demands. The demands include the protection of human rights in that country, the repressions that still exist, therefore, at this stage, Erdogan’s purpose to join the European Union is not serious, it is just a part of a big plan. “The Turks understand that it is not possible to become EU member by non-fulfillment of demands. The contradictions are very deep,” said the Turkologist-academic.

Speaking about the Turkish mediation efforts in the Russian-Ukrainian conflict, Safrastyan said that although Turkey, violating the agreement with Moscow, returned 5 commanders of the “Azov” battalion to Ukraine with Vladimir Zelensky, who had visited Turkey, however, even that step should not be considered as a sharp turn of policy towards Russia.

“That is also calculated. Ankara and Moscow understand very well that the current level of relations is of great benefit to the parties. Turkey does not join the sanctions against Russia, taking into account the implementation of large joint projects in various areas. Even in case of demarches and tough position from Moscow, the two countries will not abandon a very high level of interaction. On the other hand, Turkey has resources to resort to deceptive maneuvering actions between Russia and the West, despite the fact that its range is relatively small. The reason is that Turkey is strategically an inseparable part of the West, an ally of the USA and a loyal member of NATO,” explained Safrastyan.

He did not exclude the point of view circulating among experts that the above-mentioned political course of Ankara with its expected new manifestations may gradually cause problems in relations with Moscow, which will have a certain impact on the situation in the South Caucasus.

“Judging from the current stage of the processes, it can be concluded that in our region there may be a certain hardening of Russia’s positions towards the Turkish-Azerbaijani duo. But this will not lead to big changes or drastic shifts in Russian policy towards Turkey. As for the Armenian-Turkish relations, Ankara definitely connects this process with the settlement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict and here Ankara will never change its attitude towards Armenia. If the Armenian side agrees to the maximalist demands of Azerbaijan, on the basis of which some agreement will be signed, then Turkey will take some positive steps, but not complete. Otherwise, it is not worth expecting anything from Ankara,” concluded the Turkologist.

Manvel Margaryan




We expect continuous support and concrete actions from international partners- Alen Simonyan to Bruno Retailleau

 10:42,

YEREVAN, 12 JULY, ARMENPRESS: During the working visit to France, the delegation led by the President of the National Assembly of Armenia Alen Simonyan met with the head of the “Republicans” faction, Bruno Retailleau, ARMENPRESS was informed from the National Assembly of Armenia.  

“We highly appreciate your personal commitment to the issue of Armenia and Artsakh since 2020, as a prominent French politician, and your activity as the Founder-Chairman of the group on the Nagorno Karabakh issue in the Senate,” the President of the National Assembly said.

He expressed gratitude for the solidarity and principled positions expressed by the Senate especially in the matters of importance for Armenia since the 44-day war of 2020.

Bruno Retailleau noted that this meeting is, first of all, a long-awaited opportunity for him to communicate with good friends, which will provide an opportunity to learn news about Armenia and Artsakh Armenians. He stated that his last visit to Armenia was worrying: not only the people of Nagorno Karabakh, but also the people of Armenia are under threat. Bruno Retailleau added that authoritarianism and dictatorship have seriously questioned the development of the region through democracy.

In response, Alen Simonyan responded that they raise the issue to the international community on a daily basis and expect continuous support and concrete steps from their partners to keep the region free from shocks and war.

A wide range of issues regarding the joint work agenda were also discussed at the meeting.

Azerbaijan blocks vital route linking enclave to Armenia

     France –

Baku announced the suspension of traffic on the Nagorno-Karabakh Lachin corridor on Tuesday, citing ‘smuggling’ activity on the part of the Armenian branch of the Red Cross.

By Faustine Vincent


Pressure is rising again in the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. On Tuesday, July 11, Azerbaijan announced the suspension of road traffic in the Lachin corridor, the only road linking Armenia to this separatist territory, at the heart of a thirty-year conflict between Baku and Yerevan.

Azerbaijan says it took this measure because of “multiple smuggling attempts” via this checkpoint by vehicles belonging to the Armenian branch of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). In particular, border guards claim to have seized, between July 1 and July 5, around ten cell phones and hundreds of packs of cigarettes during search operations in these vehicles and have accused the NGO of failing to take steps to prevent these “illegal actions.” The border crossing will have to remain closed until the “necessary investigations” are completed, they said. A criminal investigation has been opened.

The ICRC immediately denied wrongdoing, claiming that “no unauthorized goods were found” in one of its vehicles. The Geneva-based organization added, however, that it “regret[ted] that without [its] knowledge four hired drivers tried to transport some commercial goods in their own vehicles which were temporarily displaying the ICRC emblem.” “These individuals,” it asserted, “were not ICRC staff members and their service contracts were immediately terminated by the ICRC.”

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Azerbaijan and Iran Face Off Over Armenia, Israel


Czech Republic –

With the South Caucasus still bubbling in the wake of the 2020 war, Tehran is stirring the pot with strategic aims in mind.

Iranian-Azerbaijani relations, or, more precisely, the steady rise in tension between Tehran and Baku, has been a key development in South Caucasus politics for the past two years. As events early in 2023 have shown, this confrontation has reached a fundamentally new level, altering the balance of interests in the region and making it necessary to seriously assess the risk of a new military conflict.

The contradictions between the two countries suddenly reached boiling point on the morning of 27 January, when news broke of an attack on the Azerbaijani Embassy in Tehran. The inaction of the Iranian police and the whitewashed official version – alleging a retaliatory action with family motives – caused a wave of indignation in Azerbaijan. Baku officially dubbed the attack “an act of terror” and demanded its speedy investigation, while also indefinitely suspending operations at the embassy. The continued closure of the embassy (although a consulate in Tabriz still functions) has, in effect, reduced the level of bilateral relations.

Anti-Baku Campaign Breaks Out on Two Fronts

In the following two months, Iranian media connected to the security elite intensified openly anti-Azerbaijani reports. These included denial of Azerbaijan’s history independent of Iran, personal attacks on its leadership, and claims of Iran’s military superiority.

Intriguingly, a rare armed incident of unclear origin occurred in Baku during this time. After an assassination attempt on Fazil Mustafa, a member of the Azerbaijani parliament known for his pro-Turkish views and criticism of Iran, four suspects were detained and accused of carrying out the attack on political orders. This was soon followed by a series of anti-Azerbaijani moves in Iran, including the expulsion of four Iranian diplomats accused of espionage. Verbal exchanges between the two governments resulted in a conversation between their foreign ministers, followed by conciliatory remarks from officials on both sides, including an article by an influential international affairs adviser to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Ali Akbar Velayati, calling for good neighborly relations to be maintained.

The fundamental question today is this: why did the Iranian leadership, unlike in numerous previous diplomatic disputes, decide to consistently raise the stakes, while Baku accepted this challenge without apparent difficulties?

Several factors have contributed to this situation. While Moscow and Tehran have a longstanding strategic partnership, Russia’s physical presence in the region has acted as a counterweight to Iranian ambitions in the South Caucasus. However, with Russia’s weakening position due to its involvement in Ukraine, Turkey and Western countries have become more active, potentially loosening Iran’s role in the region. This includes the efforts of the United States and European Union to broker a lasting settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict since Azerbaijan recaptured much of the disputed territory in the 2020 war with Armenia. 

Such engagement in the region concerns Iran’s leadership because of the potential loss of its leverage amid increased Western influence – not to mention possible morale-boosting effects for Iranian Azerbaijanis hoping that Azerbaijan will be able to solidify the gains of the war. This has led to Iran behaving more aggressively, a development that may also be related to the recent achievement of an agreement with Saudi Arabia to restore diplomatic relations and de-escalate tensions, reducing the pressure on Tehran and increasing the potential to act elsewhere.

Tehran Reaches Out to Armenia

Baku is increasingly frustrated with Iran’s hostile rhetoric under the Ebrahim Raisi government, leading to heightened reactions to any misunderstandings. The lack of trust between the leaders is a significant factor in foreign policy, and Azerbaijan is concerned about Iranian activity toward Armenia, particularly as peace negotiations carry on in Washington, Brussels, and to some extent in Moscow.

For these reasons, unambiguous signals sent from Tehran meant for Armenian ears, including statements such as “Iran will not tolerate a change of borders in the region” (by which in Armenia they usually mean the opening of a road linking Azerbaijan with Turkey through Armenian territory in Zangezur) and the opening of an Iranian consulate in the border town of Kapan, did little to calm Azerbaijani nerves. On 9 April, Armenian Security Council Secretary Armen Grigoryan was received in Tehran by his Iranian counterpart Ali Shamkhani (recently dismissed), a man who is considered the main protagonist in the successful negotiations with Saudi Arabia.

Iran’s sale of drones to the Russian army, though inferior to Turkish and Israeli models, also alarmed Baku because of their affordability and the ease of replenishing them, stoking concerns about Iran’s expanding influence in Armenia if it were to provide weapons to Yerevan, a prospect that Armenian supporters of rapprochement with Tehran have raised.

Factoring Israel Into the Equation

The matter of Israel and its strategic partnership with Azerbaijan undoubtedly plays a big role in Iran’s confrontational policy. Even if the ghost of “international Zionism” on the Iranian border plays the role of a convenient bogeyman for the regime’s propaganda, allowing it to significantly increase the popularity of anti-Azerbaijani rhetoric, relations between Azerbaijan and Israel are objectively a bone in Tehran’s throat.

Tehran University professor Ali Bigdeli’s remark in a recent interview that Israel could launch attacks against Iran from Azerbaijani territory echoes the position of most of the Iranian elite. These fears climbed significantly after the January attack by Israeli drones on military installations in Isfahan, a city in central Iran. 

Despite a longstanding friendship with Israel, Azerbaijan has been cautious not to provoke its southern neighbor unless necessary. The Azerbaijani Embassy in Tel Aviv was opened only recently, after Baku grew even more frustrated with Tehran’s more aggressive stance. Israeli President Isaac Herzog’s unambiguous remark about the “common threat” to the two countries during his visit to Baku on 30 May underlined their shared belief that Iran represents the major threat to peace and security in the region.

Domestic factors within Iranian policy, alongside geopolitical considerations, contribute significantly to the rise in tensions. Recent events have intensified the internal struggle among influential groups within Iran’s power elite. The Revolutionary Guard, once a regime watchdog, now operates as an alternative elite with its own interests, often diverging from the Supreme Leader and clergy. This group takes a hawkish stance and exhibits hostility toward Azerbaijan, viewing the country as part of Iran’s rightful hegemony. Despite disagreements, Khamenei’s tacit approval of the Guard’s hardline stance recognizes the force’s crucial role in the conduct of the regime’s foreign policy and its very survival.

Iran’s tightening of policy toward Azerbaijan, up to balancing on the brink of an open conflict, is the expected result of its complex internal dynamics, given Tehran’s historical attitude toward its northern neighbor as a kind of “Iranian Ukraine” (a historically and culturally close country that has chosen a sharply different path of development and pursues an independent foreign policy).

The outlook for the Iranian-Azerbaijani confrontation remains unclear, with concerns of a direct military conflict and Iranian intervention in border areas. Given the full-scale war in Ukraine, such forecasts should be taken seriously. However, there is a high probability of both parties scaling back and avoiding further escalation. Experts suggest that Iran typically acts discreetly rather than following its loud rhetoric. Moreover, considering the significant number of Iranian Azerbaijanis (according to various estimates, they number from 17 to 25 million, far outnumbering the 10 million total population of Azerbaijan, and make up the majority in regions directly adjacent to Azerbaijan) and Iran’s dependence on Azerbaijan in key areas like the “North-South” Eurasian transit corridor, military escalation is highly unlikely.

Iran’s aggressive behavior toward Baku aligns with a global trend seen during the Ukrainian war, where various actors exploit the West’s focus on the conflict to advance their own interests. This pattern can be observed with China, India, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and others. For Iran, threatening Baku serves as a means to pressure the West, creating a major clash of interests in the South Caucasus that becomes a headache for Western powers. This tactic aims to influence the negotiations on reviving and bringing Washington back on board the stalled 2015 deal for international monitoring of Iran’s nuclear program, prompting a revision of the longstanding policy of isolating Iran.

Murad Muradov is the co-founder and deputy director of the Topchubashov Center, a Baku-based international affairs think tank. His areas of expertise cover security and geopolitics in the South Caucasus and post-Soviet countries and international political economy.

https://tol.org/client/article/azerbaijan-and-iran-face-off-over-armenia-israel.html

The Vatican’s other peace mission

ANALYSIS

 . 9:09 PM  

The man sometimes called the Vatican’s “prime minister” is on a peace mission this week. But unlike the Ukraine war initiative led by the Vatican envoy Cardinal Matteo Zuppi, it probably won’t generate many headlines.  

In fact, you may struggle to find any reports on it at all. As of July 11, the Vatican’s in-house media doesn’t seem to have mentioned it. And it doesn’t appear on the Twitter account of the Vatican’s Secretariat of State, the hub of the Holy See’s diplomatic activity. 

But if you comb through government press releases and specialist Italian Catholic websites, you will see that Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin is currently on a trip to Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Azerbaijan and Armenia are located in the Caucasus region, where Europe and Asia meet. But that is where the commonalities between the two countries seem to end. 

Azerbaijan is a majority Muslim country of around 10 million people. It is almost three times larger than the majority Christian Armenia, which has a population of less than three million. 

Since the last years of the Cold War, the two countries have been locked in post-Soviet Eurasia’s most enduring conflict. 

Fighting has broken out periodically since 1998 over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, which is situated within Azerbaijan but populated by ethnic Armenians. The area is home to the breakaway state known as the Republic of Artsakh, which is closely tied to Armenia.

A upsurge in violence in 2020, in which both sides used loitering munitions (also known as “kamikaze drones”), is believed to have ushered in a new era of warfare dominated by deadly autonomous machines — as seen in Ukraine today.

Hundreds of soldiers were killed in the most recent major clashes at the Armenia-Azerbaijan border in September 2022, which ended with an uneasy ceasefire. 

Shortly afterward, purported environmental activists blocked the Lachin corridor, the sole road linking Armenia with Nagorno-Karabakh. Human rights groups have said that the blockade is creating a humanitarian crisis in the disputed region. 

Since his election in 2013, Pope Francis has often shown his concern over the ongoing feud between the two nations. His sensitivity to the 35-year conflict possibly dates back to his years as Archbishop of Buenos Aires, when he was said to have maintained close ties with the local Armenian community.

In 2016, Francis visited both nations on separate trips, traveling to Armenia on June 24-26 and Azerbaijan on Oct. 2. In recent months, he has repeatedly expressed his anguish over the deteriorating humanitarian situation connected to the Lachin corridor blockade.

It is against this background that Cardinal Parolin began his five-day trip to the neighboring countries.

On July 10, Parolin met with Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev. According to the president’s website, the two men reviewed the deepening of ties between Azerbaijan in the Holy See in recent years.

Steps forward have included Aliyev’s 2020 visit to the Vatican, the opening of an Azerbaijani embassy to the Holy See in 2021, and the signing that year of a cooperation agreement to restore Rome’s Catacombs of Commodilla between the Vatican and the Heydar Aliyev Foundation, a charitable body led by Azerbaijan’s First Lady Mehriban Aliyeva. 

The cardinal held talks with the country’s foreign minister Jeyhun Bayramov, discussing “the peace process between Azerbaijan and Armenia and the current situation in the region,” according to the Azerbaijan State News Agency.

The agency added that Bayramov told Parolin about the situation following the 2020 conflict, known in Azerbaijan as the “44-day Patriotic War” and by neutrals as the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War (following the first in 1988-1994). The foreign minister highlighted what he called “the crimes, vandalism and destroyed cultural and religious heritage in Azerbaijan’s liberated territories,” as well as “the mine threats and other provocations committed by Armenia.”

On Monday, the cardinal also met with Sheikh Allahshukur Pashazadeh, the Grand Mufti of the Caucasus, who reportedly defended Azerbaijan against accusations that it is destroying Armenian cultural heritage. 

Concerns about the erasure of historic Christian sites in Nagorno-Karabakh have been raised at the European Parliament and the UN’s cultural agency UNESCO.

The Shiite Muslim cleric also decried what he called “Armenian vandalism” of Azerbaijani sites — demonstrating that both sides accuse each other of attacking their patrimony.

In addition, Parolin visited the grave of Heydar Aliyev, Azerbaijan’s president from 1993 to 2003, located in the Alley of Honor, a burial site for distinguished Azerbaijanis in the capital, Baku.

Cardinal Parolin was expected to travel to Armenia July 11 (via neighboring Georgia), remaining there until July 13. He is likely to receive a warm welcome as Armenia — the first country in the world to formally adopt Christianity in 301 A.D. — sees the Vatican as a crucial ally in the preservation of its unique spiritual culture.

As well as meeting with political leaders, the cardinal may be received by Catholicos Karekin II, the head of the ancient Armenian Apostolic Church, which has drawn closer to Rome since 1970 through a series of joint declarations and gestures such as the addition of the Armenian St. Gregory of Narek to the list of Doctors of the Church recognized by Catholics in 2015.

Parolin is also due to lay a wreath at the Armenian Genocide Memorial Complex in the capital, Yerevan, emphasizing the Vatican’s recognition of the systematic destruction of the Armenian community in the Ottoman Empire in 1915-1917. Pope Francis has not hesitated to describe the killing of between 1.2 and 1.5 million Armenians as genocide, despite opposition from Turkey, the republic born out of the ruins of the Ottoman Empire (and a close ally of Azerbaijan).

Parolin is also expected to celebrate a Mass in Gyumri, the country’s second-largest city, which will no doubt be attended by members of the minority Armenian Catholic Church, one of the 23 Eastern Catholic Churches in full communion with the pope.

Even if Parolin’s trip doesn’t produce immediate results, such as an easing of the Lachin corridor crisis, it’s likely to prove a shrewd investment of the Holy See’s diplomatic capital if — or perhaps when— Armenia and Azerbaijan take up arms again.

https://www.pillarcatholic.com/p/the-vaticans-other-peace-mission