The Jerusalem Post

Pelosi condemns Azerbaijan attacks on Armenia

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TBILISI (Reuters) – US House of Representa­tives Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Sunday strongly condemned what she said were “illegal” border attacks by Azerbaijan on Armenia, using a visit to the Russian ally to pledge US support for its sovereignt­y.

Pelosi cast her trip to Armenia, a sliver of land the size of Maryland that is wedged between Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkey and Iran, as an attempt to strengthen support for what she cast as a beacon of democracy.

Speaking in the ancient city of Yerevan, Pelosi said her trip had significan­ce following the “illegal and deadly attacks by Azerbaijan on Armenian territory” that triggered border clashes in which more than 200 people were killed.

“We strongly condemn those attacks,” Pelosi said beside Armenian parliament­ary speaker Alen Simonyan, who last week expressed unhappines­s with the response of a Russian-led military alliance to Yerevan’s request for help.

Pelosi, who angered China with a trip to Taiwan last month, said it was clear that the border fighting was triggered by Azeri assaults on Armenia and that the chronology of the conflict should be made clear.

The fighting “was initiated by the Azeris and there has to be recognitio­n of that,” Pelosi said.

Pelosi’s remarks drew a fierce rebuke from Baku, which said she was endangerin­g peace in the Caucasus.

“The unsubstant­iated and unfair accusation­s leveled by Pelosi against Azerbaijan are unacceptab­le,” the foreign ministry said in a statement. “This is a serious blow to the efforts to normalize relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” the ministry said, casting Pelosi’s remarks as “Armenian propaganda.”

Such a definitive apportioni­ng of blame for the conflict goes beyond what the US State Department has so far said in public. Secretary of State Antony Blinken expressed concerns over the fighting and called for calm but did not assign blame.

Armenia said Azerbaijan shelled at least six Armenian settlement­s inside the border shortly after midnight on September 13, attacking civilian and military infrastruc­ture with drones and large caliber guns. Yerevan said it was unprovoked aggression.

Azerbaijan, backed by Turkey,

rejects those claims. Baku says Armenian sabotage units tried to mine Azeri positions, prompting soldiers to respond. Armenia says that narrative is Azeri disinforma­tion.

Russia, which repeatedly condemned Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan, considers the Caucasus as its own sphere of influence and bristles at what it casts as US meddling in the region. Moscow though, is preoccupie­d by the war in Ukraine which has triggered the biggest confrontat­ion with the West since the height of the Cold War.

Russia is Armenia’s major military ally, has a military base in northern Armenia and peacekeepe­rs along the contact line in Nagorno-Karabakh, over which Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a war in 2020.

President Vladimir Putin said on Friday that Russia had enough resources to mediate in the conflict. The latest fighting ended after a Russian-brokered ceasefire. But after appeals for help, the Collective Security Treaty Organizati­on (CSTO), a Russian-led military alliance of former Soviet republics that includes Armenia but not Azerbaijan, decided on Tuesday to dispatch a monitoring mission.

 ?? (Office to the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia/Handout via Reuters) ?? US HOUSE Speaker Nancy Pelosi receives a bouquet of flowers from Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan during a meeting in Yerevan yesterday.
(Office to the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia/Handout via Reuters) US HOUSE Speaker Nancy Pelosi receives a bouquet of flowers from Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan during a meeting in Yerevan yesterday.

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