The Daily Telegraph

Armenia warns of war with Azerbaijan ‘by the end of the week’

- By Cameron Henderson

ARMENIA could be at war with Azerbaijan “by the end of the week” unless it gives in to Baku’s demands to cede more territory, the Armenian prime minister has warned.

Nikol Pashinyan, made the comments during a meeting with residents of northern Armenia’s disputed Tavush border region, which sits close to a string of deserted Azerbaijan­i villages that Yerevan has controlled since the early 1990s.

The four villages, which have been uninhabite­d for more than 30 years, are strategica­lly important to Armenia as they straddle the main road between Yerevan, the Armenian capital, and the Georgian border.

However, Azerbaijan has demanded the return of the settlement­s, along with all of its lands, in exchange for a peace deal over the region of Nagorno-karabakh, which it seized in September last year.

Mr Pashinyan warned about the consequenc­es of a conflict, stating: “I know how such a war would end.”

In the past three years Armenia suffered defeat in a 2020 war with Azerbaijan, the humiliatin­g loss of the Armenian backed, self-proclaimed Nagorno-karabakh republic in September last year, and effective abandonmen­t by Russia, its main military ally.

Baku and Yerevan have said they both want to sign a formal peace treaty, but talks have stalled over the demarcatio­n of a 620-mile shared border, which remains closed and heavily militarise­d.

In recent weeks, Mr Pashinyan has signalled that he is willing to return Azerbaijan­i land controlled by Armenia, and suggested rerouting Armenia’s road network to avoid Azerbaijan­i territory.

Last year, Mr Pashinyan’s willingnes­s to make concession­s triggered widespread anger at home and a wave of protests he has claimed were intended to oust him from power.

Meanwhile, many in Yerevan fear that Ilham Aliyev, Azerbaijan’s strongman president, emboldened by Russia’s growing apathy towards Armenia, is laying the groundwork to conquer land inside Armenia proper.

Maria Zakharova, Russia’s foreign ministry spokesman, posted on Telegram that Yerevan’s deepening ties with the West were the reason for Armenia having to make concession­s.

Jens Stoltenber­g, Nato’s secretary general, urged Armenia and Azerbaijan to sign an “enduring” peace agreement.

“I urge both countries to reach an agreement paving the way for normalisat­ion of relations and a durable peace for your people,” he said.

Elin Suleymanov, Azerbaijan’s ambassador to London, strongly denied Baku had any plans for a third war.

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