Armenian PM critical of Moscow-dominated security pact


March 14 2023


By AVET DEMOURIAN
Associated Press

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) — Armenia’s prime minister has accused a Moscow-dominated security alliance of leaving his country in the cold in the face of a threat of renewed hostilities with neighboring Azerbaijan. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has been repeatedly critical of what he described as the failure of the Collective Security Treaty Organiation (CSTO) to protect its member Armenia amid a standoff with Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh. Speaking at Tuesday’s news conference, Pashinyan said it wasn’t Armenia that is pulling out of the CSTO, but, on the contrary, “the  CSTO is pulling out of Armenia.” He emphasized that “the threat of escalation along Armenia’s border and in Nagorno-Karabakh is very high now,” noting “increasingly aggressive rhetoric from Azerbaijan.”

https://ktvz.com/news/ap-national-business/2023/03/14/armenian-pm-critical-of-moscow-dominated-security-pact-2/

TelAviv: Opinion: Iran puts pressure on Israel’s ally Azerbaijan over Karabakh

i24

Israel – March 14 2023

Opinion: Iran puts pressure on Israel’s ally Azerbaijan over Karabakh

Ariel Kogan March 14, 2023

Is Karabakh to turn into new Syria?

With Azerbaijan getting progressively closer to Israel as of late, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and the Iranian regime see this is a major threat to their interests on the northern frontier.

Following their modus operandi, the IRGC has been training militant proxy groups, which fought in Syria already, for a new potential task – infiltrating Karabakh and disrupting Azerbaijani control of this area. Karabakh, the UN-recognized Azerbaijani territory, was mostly liberated from Armenian occupation in 2020 (thanks to Israeli military aid to Azerbaijan), except for a separatist enclave, populated by the Armenians.

The presence of Shi’ite militias in this tumultuous region would be a blatant escalation towards armed conflict, potentially leading to total regional war. A scenario which would be familiar to those knowledgeable about the conflict in Syria.

According to the Turkish news outlet Türkiye Gazetesi, the IRGC plans to deploy up to 4,000 militants and IRGC operatives to Karabakh by May 2023. For this reason, the commander of the IRGC special unit Niru-ye Qods Esmail Qaani visited Iraq and Syria in February. The Iranian general instructed the leaders of the Iranian proxy groups to create a unit for special operations.

It is not hard to imagine how the 4,000-man contingent would reach Karabakh when considering the tight-knit relations between Iran and Armenia, as well as the Lachin corridor connecting the latter and the Armenian-populated separatist enclave in Karabakh – Artsakh. Convoys secretly carrying weapons have already been confirmed traveling through lesser-known routes from Armenia to the enclave.

Moreover, the area around the Lachin corridor is under the control of Russian army peacekeepers. Just so it happens that Russia, a major ally of Iran, is supervising the only officially recognized road between Armenia, another ally of the two, and the separatist “autonomous republic” on Azerbaijani soil.

Iran and Russia have solidified their ties over the ongoing Russian war in Ukraine, so it is safe to assume that the IRGC would be able to coordinate with the Russian peacekeepers in Karabakh in order to secure safe and discreet passage into the region, and ensure no interference with their operations against Azerbaijan.

The Iranian-backed proxies which fought in Syria are numerous and diverse. To name a few infamous examples: Liwa Fatemiyoun and Liwa Zainebiyoun. The organizations are made up of Shia extremists trained, organized, and instructed by the IRGC to fight for its interests in turbulent areas on the map.

The Fatemiyoun brigade is mostly Afghans, while the Zainebiyoun brigade is primarily made up of Pakistanis – however, the ethnic makeup of the different Iranian militias varies and includes many other ethnic groups. The binding factor being the IRGC, Khomeinist ideology, and being pronounced enemies of the West and its allies. These groups are willing to carry out the ayatollah’s bidding in the most ruthless of methods.

It is not the only threat: on March 11, an Iranian military plane flew along the border with Azerbaijan without notifying or warning the Azerbaijani side of the maneuver. This incident, in violation of the internationally accepted practice of issuing a warning, was condemned by the Azeri government.

What’s more is that the Iranian aircraft flew close to the Azerbaijani territories in which, according to many IRGC and Iranian official claims, Israel presumably has military assets such as air bases and intelligence gathering outposts.

A day after that Azerbaijani secret services announced the arrests of 32 Iranian agents, who carried out “provocation and disruption acts under the guise of religion.” This is the second large operation since November last year, when a similar number of Iranian operatives and agents were arrested.

Some of them participated in planning and carrying out attempts to kill Israelis in other countries and to collect information about Israeli equipment, which is supplied to Azerbaijani military. Clearly, increased Iranian involvement in Azerbaijani affairs and destabilization efforts leading to potential escalation in the region are not without cause. Tehran sees the tightening of ties between Jerusalem and Baku as a grave threat to its hegemony and seeks out ways to weaken its opponents and provoke a disproportionate response.

AFP: Armenia PM Says Raised Peacekeeper ‘Problems’ With Putin (+Links)

BARRON'S
March 14 2023

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said Tuesday he had complained to Russian President Vladimir Putin about "problems" linked to Russian peacekeepers in restive Nagorno-Karabakh.

Caucasus arch foes Armenia and Azerbaijan have fought two brutal wars for control of the Armenian-majority region and the latest conflict in 2020 ended with the deployment of Moscow's forces.

"In a phone conversation with Putin yesterday, I spoke of a possible escalation in Nagorno-Karabakh and said that there are problems in the zone where Russian peacekeepers are responsible," Pashinyan told a news conference in Yerevan.

"Azerbaijan's rhetoric is becoming more and more aggressive every day," he said, denouncing a blockade of the so-called Lachin corridor, which is Karabakh's sole land link with Armenia.

He described the disruptions along the route that have been ongoing for months as "preparation for ethnic cleansing of Armenians."

Since mid-December, a group of self-styled Azerbaijani environmental activists has barred traffic in the Lachin corridor to protest what they say is illegal mining.

Yerevan says the blockade has led to a "full-blown humanitarian crisis" in the mountainous region which faces shortages of food, medicines and fuel.And it has said the blockade was aimed at driving Armenians from Karabakh, amounting to "an ethnic cleansing".

Baku has denied the claims.

Pashinyan said during the conference Tuesday that Armenia recently received Baku's response to proposals for a full peace treaty, which Yerevan submitted in mid-February.

He noted some progress in the peace process, but said "fundamental problems" remain because "Azerbaijan is trying to put forward territorial claims, which is a red line to Armenia."

When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, ethnic Armenian separatists in Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan. The ensuing conflict claimed around 30,000 lives.

Another flare-up in violence in 2020 left more than 6,500 dead and ended with a Russian-brokered truce.

Under the deal Armenia ceded territories it had controlled for decades and Russia deployed its peacekeeping contingent to oversee the fragile ceasefire.

mkh-im/bur/yad

https://www.barrons.com/news/armenia-pm-says-told-putin-about-problems-with-russian-peacekeepers-in-karabakh-749dddd2

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https://thecradle.co/article-view/22522/armenian-pm-expresses-concerns-over-russian-peacekeepers
https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2023/03/14/armenia-pm-says-raised-peacekeeper-problems-with-putin-a80476

Reuters: Armenian PM: We have ‘problems’ with Russia, but no crisis (+Links)

March 14 2023

TBILISI (Reuters) – Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Tuesday there were "problems" in his country's relations with Russia, but no crisis, Russian news agencies reported.

Armenia and Russia are formal allies through a mutual self-defence treaty, but Yerevan has been disgruntled by Russia's unwillingness to provide stronger support in its long-running conflict with Azerbaijan.

"There is no crisis in the relationship. We talk, discuss things, state that there are problems – which is objective," Interfax quoted Pashinyan as telling a news conference.

In 2020 Russia deployed peacekeepers to Nagorno-Karabakh – an Armenian-populated region of Azerbaijan that the two sides have contested for decades – to end weeks of fighting which saw thousands killed and Azerbaijan make significant territorial gains.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev was in Germany on Tuesday to meet with Chancellor Olaf Scholz as Europe vies to take a larger role in settling the dispute between Baku and Yerevan. Pashinyan visited Berlin for a similar meeting earlier this month.

Following Pashinyan's comments, Russia's foreign ministry said it was planning a meeting with the Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers in Moscow as Russia tries to maintain its role as the traditional regional power broker.

In the latest stand-off over Nagorno-Karabakh, Azeris claiming to be environmental protesters have been blocking the Lachin corridor – the only road route between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh – since December, triggering food and medicine shortages in the region. Yerevan says they are agitators backed by Azerbaijan, while Baku says they have legitimate grievances over illegal mining by Armenians.

The two sides have been locked in diplomacy over an attempt to broker a lasting peace settlement since Azerbaijan staged large-scale cross-border attacks inside Armenia last September that Yerevan described as unprovoked aggression.

Azerbaijan said its soldiers responded after Armenian sabotage units tried to mine its positions. More than 200 Armenian troops and around 80 Azerbaijanis were killed.

(Reporting by Jake Cordell and Caleb Davis; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

https://news.yahoo.com/armenian-pm-problems-russia-no-124357536.html

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AP: Armenian PM critical of Moscow-dominated security pact (+Links)

March 14 2023
By 

AVET DEMOURIAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS  March 14, 2023

YEREVAN, Armenia — Armenia's prime minister on Tuesday accused a Moscow-dominated security alliance of leaving his country in the cold in the face of a threat of renewed hostilities with neighboring Azerbaijan.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has been repeatedly critical of what he described as the failure of the Collective Security Treaty Organization, or CSTO, to protect member Armenia amid a standoff with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Russia, which has sought to preserve strong ties with its ally Armenia while also maintaining friendly relations with energy-rich Azerbaijan, has engaged in a delicate diplomatic balancing act, avoiding any forceful action. The Kremlin's clout in the region has become more limited as Russia has focused its resources on the war in Ukraine.

Pashinyan said at a news conference that it wasn't Armenia that is pulling out of the CSTO, but, on the contrary, "the CSTO is pulling out of Armenia, whether it wishes so or not."

"We are concerned about that," Pashinyan said.

He emphasized that "the threat of escalation along Armenia's border and in Nagorno-Karabakh is very high now," noting "increasingly aggressive rhetoric from Azerbaijan."

Tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan soared in December when Azerbaijani protesters claiming to be environmental activists blocked the so-called Lachin corridor, the main road between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, leaving its 120,000 residents short of food and other basic supplies. Last month, the United Nations' highest court ordered Azerbaijan to allow the resumption of free movement along the road, but the situation has remained tense.

Nagorno-Karabakh lies within Azerbaijan but has been under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since a separatist war there ended in 1994. In 2020, Azerbaijani troops routed Armenian forces in six weeks of fighting that ended with a Russia-brokered peace deal allowing Azerbaijan to take a significant part of Nagorno-Karabakh and reclaim nearby areas which had been in Armenian hands for nearly two decades.

During the latest standoff, Pashinyan and other Armenian officials strongly criticized Russia and the Moscow-dominated CSTO for the failure to ensure a free transit via the Lachin corridor.

Reflecting its irritation with Moscow, Armenia has canceled a planned military exercise by CSTO members set for this year and refrained from naming its representative to the bloc's leadership.

Pashinyan said that he raised Armenian concerns about the situation during a call on Monday with Russian President Vladimir Putin and mentioned a recent protest staged by Nagorno-Karabakh residents in front of Russian peacekeepers' headquarters.

Amid the tensions between Moscow and Yerevan, Armenian authorities denied entry to Margarita Simonyan, the head of Russian state-funded RT television, media manager Aram Gabrelyanov and Russian lower house member Konstantin Zatulin, who have been critical of Pashinyan's leadership. Asked about the move, Pashinyan said they have shown disrespect to Armenia, which is entitled to use the tools it sees fit to "prevent actions against its interests."

The Armenian leader noted "objective problems" in relations with the Kremlin, but said that he doesn't think that they have grown into a crisis.

In another sign of his irritation with Moscow, Pashinyan said that Armenia would welcome other countries, such as the United States and Germany, to help broker peace talks with Azerbaijan.

He also noted that "the existing security architecture didn't work," adding that Yerevan was taking efforts to "establish military-technical cooperation with many other countries."

https://www.stripes.com/theaters/europe/2023-03-14/armenian-prime-minister-moscow-security-pact-9491510.html

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WCC general secretary visits Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople

March 14 2023

World Council of Churches (WCC) general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay visited the Armenian Patriarchate in Istanbul, Turkey on 12 March. His Beatitude, Archbishop Sahak Mashalyan, the Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople, welcomed the WCC general secretary and congratulated him on his election, wishing him successful years in his service to the worldwide churches.

The general secretary thanked His Beatitude for his warm welcome and hospitality and expressed his wishes for long-term collaboration between the WCC and the Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople.

During the meeting, the WCC general secretary emphasized the important role of the Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church within the fellowship of the worldwide churches, and in the countries with significant Armenian communities. In Istanbul, where more than 50,000 Armenians are living, the Armenian Church gathers the community together in 33 churches and 17 schools, and through different activities delivered in these places of worship and education.

The meeting reflected on the need for Christian unity agreeing that unity is a gift from God that must be received and lived out by churches today.

Pillay stated, “We live in a world of inequalities, injustices, wars, factions, sufferings and violence and the unity of churches is important for us to witness to a broken world.” He added that “the miracle of the WCC is that 352 member churches with such great diversity can still come together and in oneness proclaim Christ’s love to the world. However, unity is not uniformity. Unity is when we can act as one for our common interest for the world that God wants to see.”

The meeting affirmed the need for churches to remain committed to working together and affirmed that the WCC would continue to assist churches in working and acting together to create a better world led by justice, reconciliation, and unity.

 Archbishop Sahak Mashalyan talked as well about the consequences of the devastating earthquake, which took more than 50,000 lives in Turkey. He also referred in details to his visit to the affected areas where the Armenian Church continuously provides help to the people for their basic needs. The general secretary mentioned that ecumenical organizations have responded to the situation and the WCC will organize a solidarity visit very soon to the affected places and continue to pray and seek support for the people who continue to suffer in this tragic situation.

A discussion on the 1700th anniversary of the Nicaea Council in 2025 also took place during the meeting. The archbishop highlighted the importance of the WCCs commemoration of the anniversary, and suggested some significant themes that need to be addressed in depth during the celebrations.

Pillay was accompanied by Dr Ani Ghazaryan Drissi, WCC programme executive for the Faith and Order Commission.


‘High probability of escalation’ with Azerbaijan: Armenia PM

Insider Paper
March 14 2023
AFP: Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Tuesday warned of a “very high probability” of an escalation on the restive border with Azerbaijan and in the Nagorno-Karabakh region, over which the arch foes fought two wars.

“There is a very high probability of an escalation along Armenia’s border (with Azerbaijan) and in Nagorno-Karabakh,” Pashinyan said in a press conference, accusing Baku of stepping up “aggressive rhetoric” amid the “humanitarian catastrophe” caused by Baku’s blockade of the contested territory.

Pashinyan said that Armenia lost the 2020 war because of the fifth column in the army

March 14 2023

Nikol Pashinyan promised to declassify information on this topic.

“According to my personal conviction, we lost the war because the fifth column operated in our army. I think that these facts will become public in the near future,” TASS quoted the head of the Yerevan Cabinet of Ministers.

BLiTZ wrote: the pro-Turkish vector of official Yerevan’s foreign policy was not to the taste of the Armenian population, which does not believe in the sincerity of Ankara. Columnist Ruben Margaryan came to this conclusion earlier against the backdrop of the results of an opinion poll by the International Republican Institute, according to which the rating of Nikol Pashinyan’s government was rapidly collapsing.

https://www.weeklyblitz.net/news/pashinyan-said-that-armenia-lost-the-2020-war-because-of-the-fifth-column-in-the-army/

Azerbaijan uses the language of threats in negotiations with Armenia, Pashinyan said.

March 14 2023

Azerbaijan is using the language of threats in the negotiation process on a peace treaty with Armenia, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at a press conference on Tuesday.

“Azerbaijan uses the language of threats in the negotiation process. This was the case before the war. We see that Azerbaijan is laying “mines” in the text of the peace treaty in order to continue its aggressive policy towards Armenia after its signing,” Pashinyan said.

He added that Baku insists on signing its version of the peace treaty, “threatening with a large-scale offensive.”

“We are ready to make decisions leading to long-term peace and stability,” the prime minister said.


Answering a question about the country’s readiness for a new escalation, Pashinyan noted that it depends on many factors, and all these factors cannot be taken into account based on an unstable situation.

“We will do everything to prevent escalation, and in the event of a possible attack, we will do everything to protect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the motherland,” Pashinyan said.

He added that peace cannot be forced, “peace should be a common achievement for the region.


Yerevan and Baku last year, with the mediation of Russia, the United States and the European Union, began discussing a future peace treaty. Both states periodically exchange proposals on the text of a peace treaty.

‘High Probability Of Escalation’ With Azerbaijan: Armenia PM

BARRON'S
March 14 2023

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Tuesday warned of a "very high probability" of an escalation on the restive border with Azerbaijan and in the Nagorno-Karabakh region, over which the arch foes fought two wars.

"There is a very high probability of an escalation along Armenia's border (with Azerbaijan) and in Nagorno-Karabakh," Pashinyan said in a press conference, accusing Baku of stepping up "aggressive rhetoric" amid the "humanitarian catastrophe" caused by Baku's blockade of the contested territory.

mkh-im/brw/yad