Day: January 13, 2024
I’m sure, #Azerbaijan aims to conclude such an agreement with #Armenia by which the main problems will not be solved; they will remain uncertain. It’s a matter of life and death for #Baku, and in the political sense, it’s a long-term strategy. Azerbaijan has a problem keeping… pic.twitter.com/y7s3LEkJsy
— Robert Ananyan (@robananyan) January 13, 2024
In our opinion, Armenia is in the most vulnerable position it’s been in since the fall of the USSR and Azerbaijan the strongest.
— Nagorno Karabakh Observer (@NKobserver) January 13, 2024
Armenia will continue to face serious challenges with a military in apparent disarray since the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh war and no genuine steps by the current political leadership to build a deterrence mechanism militarily or diplomatically.
— Nagorno Karabakh Observer (@NKobserver) January 13, 2024
From this point of view, literally everything Aliyev says, he means it, including the perception of Yerevan as an Azerbaijani city.
— Nagorno Karabakh Observer (@NKobserver) January 13, 2024
Of course, the interview was provided to local media, for an internal audience, but Aliyev’s perception and comments on past military operations in Nagorno Karabakh and Armenia are spot on with the logic of Baku’s foreign policy.
— Nagorno Karabakh Observer (@NKobserver) January 13, 2024
The interview is long, but it’s really worth a read, it clarifies many rumours and provides a clear picture of President Aliyev’s perception of events and Azerbaijan’s over-assertive foreign policy, possibly even a “what’s next” for conflicts in the South Caucasus.
— Nagorno Karabakh Observer (@NKobserver) January 13, 2024
NPR News: 01-13-2024 3PM EST
Armenia will continue to face serious challenges with a military in apparent disarray since the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh war and no genuine steps by the current political leadership to build a deterrence mechanism militarily or diplomatically.
— Nagorno Karabakh Observer (@NKobserver) January 13, 2024
