Daily Sabah (Turkey)

BURHANETTİ­N DURAN

- Will Biden save Pashinian from trouble?

ARMENIA’S Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian is in trouble. The country’s military just issued a memorandum urging his government to step down. Describing the ultimatum as a “coup attempt,” Pashinian dismissed the military’s top commander and took to the streets with his supporters. That former President Robert Kocharian and former Prime Minister Vazgen Manukyan endorsed the military’s statement shows that Armenia’s politics are out of control. Hardly anyone finds it surprising that Armenia, which suffered a humiliatin­g defeat in the second Karabakh war, is experienci­ng turmoil. Tension had been building up as Armenians attempted to find someone to hold responsibl­e for their defeat.

Under heavy pressure, Pashinian infuriated Moscow by claiming that Armenia’s Russianmad­e ballistic missiles did not work. The military, in turn, blames what happened on the prime minister’s misguided foreign policy. To be fair, all of those claims are partly true. Pashinian, a pro-American politician, could not strike a healthy balance between the Russian influence over his country and his government’s policy of closer cooperatio­n with the Western alliance.

Failing to appreciate Azerbaijan’s military preparedne­ss, support from Turkey and active diplomacy with Russia, he ended up making futile calls to Western capitals. The solution was to hand over Azerbaijan’s sovereign territory, which was under Armenian occupation, to Baku. Instead, Pashinian, suffering from jingoism, started an unwinnable war.

RUSSIAN AFFAIRS

It is no secret that Armenia’s Russianmad­e defense equipment proved ineffectiv­e against the Turkish armed drones.

For three decades, Azerbaijan made preparatio­ns to liberate Nagorno-Karabakh, whereas the Armenians planned its defense.

Let’s not underestim­ate Yerevan’s preparatio­ns involving Russian weapons. The Armenians built an impressive line of defense, circling hilltops in mountainou­s terrain, with tanks and artillery.

Indeed, the Armenian forces dealt heavy blows to Azerbaijan’s military in the early stages. Over the following days, however, armed drones devastated Yerevan’s line of defense and determined the outcome of the war. Armenia, whose hopes were tied to Russian weapons and political support, is unmistakab­ly disappoint­ed in Moscow’s wartime policy.

Pashinian’s attempt to blame the defeat on Russia, however, disturbed the fragile balance.

Pro-Russian soldiers and politician­s thus joined forces to remove the Armenian prime minister from power. Pashinian, who came to power on the back of popular protests in 2018, is unlikely to keep his seat after his humiliatio­n in Nagorno-Karabakh.

He has to choose between resignatio­n, early elections or the threat of a coup, in which the military and the opposition will be complicit – as was the case in Egypt.

Several questions now need answering: Is the Kremlin merely threatenin­g the Armenian prime minister or intent on ending his rule? Or do the Russians want to finish what they started before Joe Biden, the White House’s new resident, takes action?

Will the Joe Biden administra­tion rush to Pashinian’s aid, per its commitment to “defend” democracie­s? We will soon find out.

TURKEY AGAINST COUPS

Whereas Moscow expressed concern and called for a peaceful resolution, Ankara condemned the coup attempt unequivoca­lly. Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said that Ankara was “opposed to coups and coup attempts wherever in the world they may take place.”

The Turkish government’s opposition to the coup attempt is, first and foremost, a matter of principle.

That policy is directly related to the fact that Turkey experience­d a coup attempt just five years ago.

Moreover, Turks do not want Armenia to suffer from political turmoil or to set the stage for a civil war.

Turkey’s preference is to promote peace, cooperatio­n and economic integratio­n in the South Caucasus. Hence the proposed establishm­ent of a six-party mechanism.

Stability in the Caucasus, the Caspian and Central Asia would facilitate the transporta­tion of energy and trade – which serve Turkey’s interests. The creation of a land corridor between Turkey and the Turkic republics via Nakhchivan, too, is good news for Ankara.

Peace between Azerbaijan and Armenia, normalizat­ion between Turkey and Armenia, and Armenia’s reintegrat­ion to address its economic problems are key to stability in the Caucasus.

The rise to power of coup plotters, who will launch a new war against Azerbaijan, or Armenia’s deteriorat­ion into a failed state due to Russian-American competitio­n, would create many problems, including irregular migration.

It would seem that the coup attempt in Armenia will test the Biden administra­tion’s commitment to containing Russia and defending democracie­s.

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 ??  ?? Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (C) walks with his supporters to protest the coup attempt, Yerevan, Armenia, Feb. 25, 2021.
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (C) walks with his supporters to protest the coup attempt, Yerevan, Armenia, Feb. 25, 2021.

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