Armenian News Network - Groong: Week In Review Podcast

Arthur Martirosyan - May 9, India Pakistan, Armenia Azerbaijan, New Pope | Ep 435, May 11, 2025

Arthur G. Martirosyan Episode 435

Groong Week in Review - May 11, 2025

Topics

  • May 9 Victory Parade
  • Ukraine
  • India and Pakistan
  • Armenian Azerbaijani Talks
  • American Pope

Guest

Hosts

Episode 435 | Recorded: May 12, 2025

SHOW NOTES: https://podcasts.groong.org/435

VIDEO: https://youtu.be/DYQGg6pHONI


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(00:00:04):
Hello,

(00:00:05):
everyone,

(00:00:05):
and welcome to this Armenian News Network Groong, Week in Review for

(00:00:11):
the week ending with May 11,

(00:00:14):
2025.

(00:00:14):
Today, we're talking with Arthur G. Martirosyan.

(00:00:17):
He is an international conflict management expert with CM Partners.

(00:00:21):
Hello, Arthur.

(00:00:21):
Welcome back.

(00:00:22):
Hi.

(00:00:24):
Thank you.

(00:00:24):
Thank you for having me.

(00:00:25):
Great to have you.

(00:00:27):
So we're covering the events of the previous week,

(00:00:30):
which was the week ending on May 10 or May 11.

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And the obvious event of the week was May 9, Victory Day.

(00:00:42):
And Victory Day in Moscow this year was as much a display of global politics as it

(00:00:47):
was a simple Russian military parade.

(00:00:49):
Xi Jinping's presence as the guest of honor underscored China's expanding influence

(00:00:56):
and shifting global dynamics.

(00:00:59):
And despite pressure from EU bureaucrats, some EU leaders attended.

(00:01:04):
reflecting the complexity of current alliances.

(00:01:07):
Meanwhile,

(00:01:07):
in the United States,

(00:01:08):
Trump is pushing for a new holiday to celebrate the Allied victory of World War II

(00:01:14):
and framing it as a distinctly American triumph,

(00:01:18):
a move that underscores,

(00:01:19):
I guess,

(00:01:19):
the battle over historical narratives that we're seeing right now.

(00:01:23):
In Moscow,

(00:01:25):
Russia positioned itself along China and other Global South leaders and signaling a

(00:01:31):
potential challenge to the post-World War II order.

(00:01:36):
What were your overall impressions,

(00:01:37):
Arthur,

(00:01:37):
on the global significance of this year's May 9 celebrations?

(00:01:43):
Is Russia using Victory Day to signal its alignment with the Global South and

(00:01:49):
potentially reshaping global balance of power?

(00:01:54):
Well,

(00:01:54):
I think we need to start from a definition of where the world is today,

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and it's very far from the order that was established after World War II,

(00:02:06):
that is the Potsdam-Yalta system,

(00:02:11):
which was working more or less,

(00:02:14):
but in the last 20 years or so,

(00:02:18):
it's been kind of gradually getting to a point where

(00:02:22):
we can no longer talk about the order.

(00:02:25):
So the new world order is still in the making.

(00:02:29):
What shape it's going to take,

(00:02:30):
it's very hard to say,

(00:02:32):
but you quite correctly pointed out that the new alliances,

(00:02:39):
the new kind of power dynamic is developing and much will depend on also where

(00:02:47):
Russia ends the game.

(00:02:50):
not so much on Ukraine, but in its relationship with the West.

(00:02:54):
That scenario where it's going to further escalate is going to suddenly drive them

(00:03:00):
closer to China.

(00:03:02):
And not surprisingly,

(00:03:04):
Russians who were denying the presence of North Koreans in the battlefields in Kursk,

(00:03:13):
openly demonstrated that,

(00:03:15):
yes,

(00:03:16):
they were there,

(00:03:17):
and they're ready to do more fighting with Russians.

(00:03:21):
So this is a clear signal that Russia may choose to develop new kind of alliances

(00:03:29):
and get away from what would be an

(00:03:33):
normal development,

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essentially,

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culturally,

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with more proclivities to European culture country,

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Russia,

(00:03:45):
would be driving in directions that are not necessarily resonate with its own identity.

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But that's not an impossible scenario.

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And I think May Day or May Celebration Victory Day continues to be divisive.

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I see it as a reaction of the West to this.

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And I think Germans are doing things that were very uncommon or even unbelievable

(00:04:18):
even 10 years ago when Germans

(00:04:22):
celebration in Berlin is kind of more controlled,

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what flags,

(00:04:27):
what can be on display,

(00:04:29):
and so on.

(00:04:29):
So the issue is certainly historic,

(00:04:34):
but Russia has been,

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especially under Putin,

(00:04:38):
has been using this as one of the cornerstones of the Russian identity,

(00:04:44):
kind of glorious victory in that war.

(00:04:47):
And now Trump challenging that and kind of

(00:04:52):
claiming credit for winning in that war,

(00:04:57):
is,

(00:04:57):
I think,

(00:04:58):
in a way,

(00:04:59):
a historical,

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as is a historical,

(00:05:02):
the Russian claim that they could have won this war without the Allies.

(00:05:07):
It was a joint effort.

(00:05:09):
And kind of when you get into distribution of it,

(00:05:13):
obviously the human toll,

(00:05:15):
the biggest was the Soviet and not to a little degree Armenian input.

(00:05:22):
500,000 mobilized from Armenia, men, and then losses were anywhere around 200,000.

(00:05:30):
So a very small place like Armenia contributed in a way,

(00:05:35):
as again,

(00:05:35):
if we talk about the human toll,

(00:05:38):
more than are comparable to the British losses in that war.

(00:05:43):
And the British were fighting it in many different fronts,

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in Africa,

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in the Far East,

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and obviously on the European theater.

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But in terms of technology,

(00:05:55):
in terms of what the West contributed through Lend-Lease,

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it's,

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I think,

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goes without any questions that that was a major contribution to the Russian

(00:06:07):
victory in that war.

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Do they need to claim a victory without others?

(00:06:11):
I think that would be a historical, no matter who does it.

(00:06:14):
They need to come to some kind of a consensus

(00:06:19):
that it was a joint effort,

(00:06:20):
which it was historically,

(00:06:22):
and that neither side should try to minimize or claim exclusive credit for the

(00:06:32):
results of that war.

(00:06:33):
But as I said, for Russians, it's a matter of identity.

(00:06:37):
Will the U.S.

(00:06:37):
be able to revise that history and create a new narrative where Americans

(00:06:43):
E.J.

(00:06:43):
80 years after the war will be celebrating it as solely American victory,

(00:06:50):
I doubt that is possible,

(00:06:51):
but nothing I mean these days of social engineering is is impossible,

(00:06:56):
it will depend on how much effort it's going to be there's going to be put into this,

(00:07:01):
we know what happened,

(00:07:02):
I mean.

(00:07:04):
Indeed.

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The German high command after Hitler's suicide was headed by Admiral Dönitz.

(00:07:14):
And he sent his representative Yodel to Reims in France,

(00:07:19):
where the headquarters of General Eisenhower,

(00:07:22):
the chief commander of the Allied forces,

(00:07:25):
was stationed at the time.

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And yes, on May 7th, he signed the capitulation.

(00:07:33):
But he did that because for them,

(00:07:35):
it was better to surrender to Americans,

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to the West,

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than to surrender to the Soviets.

(00:07:42):
Obviously,

(00:07:43):
that irated Stalin,

(00:07:46):
although his general was in range at the time as witnessing the ceremony.

(00:07:52):
but he demanded that a new capitulation act be signed, and a new one was signed on the 8th.

(00:08:01):
The texts are identical.

(00:08:03):
I mean, there are slight differences in the two texts, but essentially...

(00:08:09):
Now,

(00:08:10):
General Keitel and a few other senior officers of the German command signed the

(00:08:17):
capitulation that Russians demanded.

(00:08:21):
But it was agreed that the ceasefire would be at 23:00 at night of May 8 in Reims

(00:08:29):
and in Karlshurst in Berlin.

(00:08:33):
both capitulations,

(00:08:34):
and 23:00 in Europe was already after midnight in Moscow,

(00:08:40):
and that's why it's May 9th.

(00:08:43):
But can they now turn it into an apple of contention?

(00:08:49):
I don't think it's wise to go that way.

(00:08:52):
It's obvious that a country that lost over 27 million people,

(00:08:58):
it's going to be an ongoing trauma.

(00:09:01):
And you could pay not much attention to the military parade.

(00:09:06):
But what happens when people now in the third generation or even in the fourth

(00:09:11):
generation are still coming out with the pictures of their grandparents who

(00:09:17):
perished in that war or were fighting in that war?

(00:09:20):
That alone says a lot about how important it is for the Russian identity.

(00:09:26):
And obviously the state uses that because they need some fundamentals of their identity, right?

(00:09:34):
Around what we're going to be united as the Russian people or the Rossiani.

(00:09:41):
A symbol of cohesion, basically.

(00:09:44):
Essentially, yes.

(00:09:46):
So that's why they put so much effort into that.

(00:09:49):
As to China, China was also part of that world war.

(00:09:53):
We forget, but the Chinese lost also around 30 million people in that war.

(00:10:00):
with Japan and internal the civil war that continued in China.

(00:10:06):
So for them, too, it's an important historical event.

(00:10:11):
And that's why I'm not surprised that Xi Jinping accepted the invitation.

(00:10:16):
But beyond the symbolism,

(00:10:20):
beyond the identity issues and history,

(00:10:24):
this is also a manifestation of the relationship,

(00:10:28):
which

(00:10:29):
probably is going to be important in terms of the emerging world order.

(00:10:35):
Armenia,

(00:10:36):
as you said,

(00:10:37):
also contributed heavily in terms of both soldiers,

(00:10:41):
as you said,

(00:10:41):
I think more than 500,000 just on the Soviet side and hundreds of thousands of deaths.

(00:10:48):
So May 9 also,

(00:10:50):
I think,

(00:10:50):
carries a special significance,

(00:10:52):
especially for Eastern Armenians or Armenians from the Republic of Armenia.

(00:10:57):
May 9 was celebrated as a triple holiday,

(00:10:59):
the day of liberation of Shushi and the day of the formation of the Artsakh army,

(00:11:06):
which were three separate holidays,

(00:11:07):
but they were all celebrated as one.

(00:11:09):
So Nikol Pashinyan attended Victory Day events in Moscow,

(00:11:13):
but Armenia chose not to send a military contingent for the parade.

(00:11:17):
which is a notable contrast to Azerbaijan,

(00:11:19):
whose leader Ilham Aliyev did not attend last minute,

(00:11:23):
but sent a military contingent to the parade.

(00:11:26):
And this divergence could,

(00:11:29):
in my opinion,

(00:11:29):
highlight the evolving dynamics in the region as both countries try to realign themselves.

(00:11:37):
Interestingly,

(00:11:38):
Armenia's pro-Western leadership also appears to be engaging in some of the same

(00:11:42):
battle or revisionism over the historical record

(00:11:47):
On May 9,

(00:11:48):
on Armenia's Public TV,

(00:11:51):
they aired a primetime interview with Artsurun Hovhannisyan of the “Haghtelu enq”

(00:11:57):
fame from the 40-day falsified Artsakh war that was presented to the people on the screens.

(00:12:07):
And he challenged some deeply rooted beliefs prevalent everywhere in the post-Soviet world.

(00:12:13):
I mean, talk about historical revisionism.

(00:12:17):
You know,

(00:12:18):
he was basically saying that the Germans,

(00:12:20):
one of the things he was saying was the Germans were ready to give all of Western Armenia,

(00:12:25):
unite Western Armenia and give it back to Armenia if they had one.

(00:12:28):
Meanwhile,

(00:12:29):
here I am thinking that Germany and Turkey were going to invade Armenia as well as

(00:12:34):
Central Asia was going to become Turkish as part of that deal.

(00:12:38):
uh so what's going on and can you talk about the significance of the victory to

(00:12:43):
Armenians specifically and also this uh revisionism that Pashinyan is engaging in as

(00:12:51):
it's very obvious to us it's it's a bigger package for uh Pashinyan he's been

(00:12:57):
talking about uh some of the myths of the soviet empire that armenians were not uh

(00:13:04):
kind of free in expressing their will,

(00:13:08):
and therefore even the genocide commemoration was something that was pushed on

(00:13:15):
Armenians from Moscow and KGB as part of the Cold War kind of calculus.

(00:13:23):
anti-Turkey stance of the Soviets, a NATO member.

(00:13:27):
So he's been saying all that stuff without necessarily providing historical evidence,

(00:13:33):
but he went to Moscow.

(00:13:36):
We saw that he didn't feel very comfortable.

(00:13:38):
Arthur, I know Asbed is a grandchild of genocide survivors.

(00:13:44):
I am a grandchild of genocide survivors.

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I'm not sure if you have a family,

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but most people I know,

(00:13:48):
I mean,

(00:13:49):
just so that our listeners who may not be Armenian understand that most Armenians,

(00:13:55):
just like,

(00:13:56):
you know,

(00:13:57):
in the Russian case,

(00:13:59):
have direct family evidence of the Genocide.

(00:14:01):
So this package of denial that includes Genocide denial as well is like a horror

(00:14:06):
show for us,

(00:14:08):
if I may say so.

(00:14:09):
So, you know, please continue.

(00:14:12):
I was not giving my evaluation of what he's doing.

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I'm just saying that he's doing that.

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And he's doing that because that's part of his somewhat warped vision of a new real Armenia,

(00:14:24):
where Armenia will be in good terms with the neighbors and namely with Turkey.

(00:14:30):
And therefore, we should do per Pashinyan.

(00:14:34):
do what Turks have been demanding, that is, turn over that page, history.

(00:14:40):
It's past, okay?

(00:14:42):
And in that past,

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there are so many different issues,

(00:14:45):
and he accepts,

(00:14:46):
essentially,

(00:14:47):
the narratives and myths

(00:14:50):
spread by the Turkish propaganda.

(00:14:53):
And he invites a revision of our history using those narratives.

(00:14:59):
And that goes also with the May 9, and Hovhannisyan came to this interview

(00:15:07):
almost claiming that he was going to kind of dismantle some of the myths about that war.

(00:15:14):
But in fact,

(00:15:15):
he didn't say anything that was not known from voluminous literature,

(00:15:20):
including Western literature.

(00:15:22):
War specialists,

(00:15:24):
historians have written so much about it in many details,

(00:15:29):
all episodes that he was talking about.

(00:15:31):
He was making all sorts of inaccuracies in his presentation, and I'm not interested

(00:15:38):
right now in making all those corrections.

(00:15:40):
There were more than a dozen inaccurate things that he said.

(00:15:43):
For instance,

(00:15:43):
he was saying that May 9 was not celebrated in the Soviet Union until after

(00:15:48):
Stalin's death in 1965.

(00:15:51):
That is not true.

(00:15:52):
It was not a holiday.

(00:15:54):
It was not a day off until 1965.

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But that does mean that it was not recognized as an important holiday in the calendar.

(00:16:06):
And there were many more of those, small inaccuracies.

(00:16:11):
But the most important piece that he provided was his admiration with the German

(00:16:18):
military might and machine.

(00:16:21):
Not directly,

(00:16:22):
but kind of implying that the Soviets were winning their battles by sheer numbers,

(00:16:30):
and they were not counting the losses,

(00:16:33):
and therefore it was a war where one side was ready to

(00:16:39):
sacrifice as many soldiers and officers as was necessary to achieve the goal,

(00:16:45):
and the other side was acting differently.

(00:16:48):
This is certainly not very correct,

(00:16:51):
because if anyone has seen the Battle of Berlin documentaries on that,

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including Western documentaries,

(00:16:59):
Even teenagers were called up from Hitlerjugend to defend Berlin.

(00:17:06):
And Goebbels, after Stalingrad, was talking about total war.

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Total war.

(00:17:13):
And that's a very different notion, right?

(00:17:15):
But Hovannisyan was not the only one to talk about it.

(00:17:18):
There were other shows,

(00:17:20):
kind of debates,

(00:17:21):
and in one the anchor was saying,

(00:17:24):
people didn't want to fight that war.

(00:17:26):
Why are they calling patriotic war?

(00:17:28):
It's an exaggeration.

(00:17:31):
I mean, if anyone was watching that from Moscow, that sounded as an insult, really as an insult.

(00:17:39):
But back to Hovannisyan,

(00:17:41):
and one myth that he was trying to push is related to Operation Gertrude.

(00:17:49):
He claimed that operation was planned by Germans,

(00:17:54):
and as you said,

(00:17:57):
if successful,

(00:17:58):
it would allow for the creation of Greater Armenia,

(00:18:02):
and the Soviet Armenia and Western Armenia would be united in one big state.

(00:18:07):
That's sheer nonsense.

(00:18:09):
Historians who know the history of the operations that were not implemented in World War II

(00:18:17):
know about this Operation Gertrude from the British intelligence sources.

(00:18:23):
It can be even speculated that a leak was organized,

(00:18:27):
and maybe by German counterintelligence and Schellenberg's office,

(00:18:32):
so that they could feed that to Americans.

(00:18:36):
And Life magazine published even a map of that plan in 1943,

(00:18:42):
right before the meeting of Ismet İnönü of Turkey with Churchill and Roosevelt in Cairo,

(00:18:50):
so that they could show him what Germans have on their mind.

(00:18:54):
And knowing Germans, they could have pushed that leak

(00:18:59):
And in parallel, delivered to Turks a proof that it is a fake, right?

(00:19:05):
Not surprisingly,

(00:19:06):
Churchill and Roosevelt were not able in 1943,

(00:19:09):
this is end of 1943,

(00:19:10):
to persuade in on you that...

(00:19:15):
He needed to give up his policy of active neutrality,

(00:19:19):
which was essentially an alliance with Germany as he was supplying them very much

(00:19:25):
needed by the German military industry components and resources like chrome and cobalt,

(00:19:32):
without which it would be impossible to

(00:19:34):
produce the armor of the panzer divisions.

(00:19:38):
And there were other areas where they were collaborating.

(00:19:43):
So what do we make of this Gertrude operation?

(00:19:46):
Gertrude operation was a contingency plan.

(00:19:50):
Even if it was, it was a contingency plan.

(00:19:52):
But Hitler gave up on it as they were preparing Barbarossa plan.

(00:19:58):
And he was the one who instructed Franz von Papen,

(00:20:03):
the ambassador to Ankara,

(00:20:06):
Third Reich's ambassador to Ankara,

(00:20:08):
to pull out a friendship treaty with Ankara,

(00:20:13):
which was done on June 18th.

(00:20:17):
1941, right before the war started.

(00:20:19):
So general staffs of all countries,

(00:20:21):
and if you look into what sorts of operations were planned and not implemented,

(00:20:27):
all sorts of contingency and scenario,

(00:20:30):
things that were developed by general staffs of warring parties,

(00:20:36):
I mean,

(00:20:36):
I wouldn't be surprised if something like that existed.

(00:20:40):
So Germans had some kind of a plan because they wanted to get to Suez,

(00:20:45):
and they wanted to cut off the Brits from their colonies, essentially.

(00:20:52):
There could have existed that kind of a plan.

(00:20:54):
Moreover, they were eager to get to the Caspian Sea and the oil.

(00:20:59):
But strategically,

(00:21:02):
in Barbarossa's plan,

(00:21:04):
their plan was to get to the Caspian Sea through the Caucasus,

(00:21:09):
and then essentially from the Caucasus down to...

(00:21:12):
to Iran and further down.

(00:21:15):
As to Turkey,

(00:21:16):
as I said,

(00:21:16):
Hitler gave up on the idea of militarily engaging with Turkey,

(00:21:21):
not because militarily they couldn't achieve that goal,

(00:21:25):
but because the resources were concentrated on Barbarossa.

(00:21:29):
And obviously,

(00:21:30):
the defeat in the battle for the Caucasus,

(00:21:35):
and then followed by another major defeat of Wehrmacht,

(00:21:39):
that is Stalingrad,

(00:21:43):
changed those plans.

(00:21:44):
But it didn't mean that Germans could go back to get through there.

(00:21:51):
They thought that they still could persuade Turkey to step up in that war on the

(00:21:58):
side of the Axis,

(00:22:00):
diplomatically could be achieved.

(00:22:02):
But militarily,

(00:22:04):
a defeat after a defeat,

(00:22:06):
and it was followed by Kursk,

(00:22:07):
and Germans were driven out.

(00:22:10):
made in on you very, very suspicious of the possibility.

(00:22:15):
And Turkish historians are writing about this stuff on what factions existed in

(00:22:21):
Turkey at the time.

(00:22:22):
There was pro-British or pro-Anglo-Saxon faction, which was small, but it existed.

(00:22:29):
And before the war,

(00:22:32):
Brits were trying to get Turkey on their side and even had a trade line to rearm

(00:22:41):
the Turkish army.

(00:22:42):
But the truth is,

(00:22:43):
the fact is that Turkey at that time took a kind of a waiting position,

(00:22:48):
kind of trying to see who's going to be the winner here so that they can

(00:22:53):
jump on a bandwagon with the winners.

(00:22:56):
And for that purpose,

(00:22:58):
starting July 1942,

(00:22:59):
they had major concentration of their military,

(00:23:05):
and they started a mobilization.

(00:23:07):
Even men over 60 were mobilized.

(00:23:10):
So they brought the number of their army to one million,

(00:23:14):
and 75% of that force was placed near the border with Georgia,

(00:23:21):
Batumi,

(00:23:21):
and Soviet Armenia, Georgia and Soviet Armenia, respectively.

(00:23:26):
Were they thinking of getting into that war?

(00:23:30):
Most likely, but that was contingent also on what could happen in Stalingrad.

(00:23:36):
They were waiting for it.

(00:23:37):
So when Hovhannisyan is talking about those issues,

(00:23:41):
He can do that on Armenian public television, which is a propaganda outlet, essentially.

(00:23:48):
But I don't think any serious historian can take his claim, because there's no evidence.

(00:23:53):
He would be a hard place to provide any empirical data or evidence to support his claim.

(00:24:02):
And we do not need to forget that in Oberzalzburg on August 22nd, 1939,

(00:24:10):
Hitler,

(00:24:11):
motivating his troops to be ruthless,

(00:24:14):
was also mentioning Armenians and saying that who now remembers Armenians?

(00:24:20):
So it's very difficult to believe that Hitler would have any plans to recreate

(00:24:28):
greater Armenia,

(00:24:29):
especially knowing that there were no Armenians left in Western Armenia in genocide.

(00:24:35):
And 25 years after the genocide, all of a sudden he would have that kind of a plan.

(00:24:42):
It's, I think it's, but then there is a question, why is he doing this?

(00:24:45):
First, he was trying to,

(00:24:48):
over-exaggerate, and at some point he even said that maybe over-exaggerating the land lease.

(00:24:54):
So saying that the Soviets provided Foda for the war,

(00:24:59):
and Americans provided the technology,

(00:25:02):
and therefore superior technology,

(00:25:05):
Americans' superior technology.

(00:25:07):
And kind of the hint is that that's the same case even now, right?

(00:25:13):
Number two is the obvious spiel of Pashinyan propaganda,

(00:25:18):
that Turks really,

(00:25:20):
after the Genocide,

(00:25:21):
they really didn't want to go after Armenia and Armenians.

(00:25:26):
It was Soviet propaganda.

(00:25:29):
And hence, here is our war historian who will tell you the truth as it was.

(00:25:36):
But he came up with another myth, right?

(00:25:39):
Sadly, I think that will be circulating not only in Yerba,

(00:25:44):
but in Armenia,

(00:25:45):
and people will be saying,

(00:25:46):
yes,

(00:25:48):
what point of Armenia participating in that war?

(00:25:51):
He was talking about the grand Armenian army,

(00:25:54):
army that we've never had before,

(00:25:56):
300,000 people,

(00:25:58):
but that army was part of the Soviet empire.

(00:26:01):
Yes, he acknowledged that.

(00:26:03):
Unfortunately,

(00:26:04):
he said it was part of the Soviet empire,

(00:26:06):
but we didn't have the independent state to have that kind of army.

(00:26:10):
And again,

(00:26:12):
what they are doing is these are innuendos and playing with subtle themes that the

(00:26:19):
true real Armenia that we're going to create,

(00:26:23):
look how much we contributed to the effort that was not really ours.

(00:26:28):
Was it our war?

(00:26:29):
It was not our war.

(00:26:31):
Turks were not really threatening us.

(00:26:33):
Moreover, Germans wanted to help us create Great Armenia there.

(00:26:38):
So we can, over time, become even more powerful that way.

(00:26:45):
This is obviously propaganda nonsense based on innuendos, right?

(00:26:49):
I mean, people will be, what conclusions they are going to arrive after listening to nonsense.

(00:26:57):
That one day we can do that, see how we should be proud of what we did.

(00:27:03):
And yet we have also to understand that we did it not for ourselves.

(00:27:07):
And if we are creating this new Armenia that Pashinyan is talking about,

(00:27:12):
we're going to have a victory not only in the football,

(00:27:18):
in soccer,

(00:27:19):
when we,

(00:27:20):
as he promised,

(00:27:20):
are going to be number one in the world in soccer,

(00:27:25):
but also would be able to recreate that kind of an army,

(00:27:28):
that kind of a force.

(00:27:30):
This is nonsense.

(00:27:32):
Yeah, Arthur, I do want to address some of the other things coming back to modern day history.

(00:27:37):
And just to close off that discussion about history,

(00:27:40):
I don't need the KGB to tell me about my Genocide and I don't need the KGB to

(00:27:44):
understand the significant contribution of Armenians and the fact that Armenia

(00:27:51):
wouldn't just exist in its form if Russia,

(00:27:53):
for instance,

(00:27:54):
or Soviet Union lost that war.

(00:27:56):
So I think it's important to set that record straight and thank you for doing that.

(00:28:00):
Now,

(00:28:01):
coming back to the parade,

(00:28:04):
very quickly,

(00:28:04):
what are your thoughts about Pashinyan not sending a military contingent for the

(00:28:08):
parade and Aliyev also canceling his trip,

(00:28:11):
but obviously there was an Azerbaijani contingent?

(00:28:15):
Well,

(00:28:16):
Aliyev could tell Moscow that his father's birthday is coming and he's tied up with preparations.

(00:28:23):
Unfortunately,

(00:28:24):
he cannot come,

(00:28:26):
but he's,

(00:28:27):
as usual,

(00:28:27):
he's sending the contingent,

(00:28:30):
and without Azerbaijan,

(00:28:32):
the victory would not be possible,

(00:28:34):
because it was Azerbaijani oil.

(00:28:35):
Again, it was not Azerbaijani oil, it was the Soviets, right?

(00:28:39):
It was Soviet at the time.

(00:28:42):
And it was oil fields that Armenians developed as well, if he's using that.

(00:28:48):
Anyway, I don't want to go there.

(00:28:50):
But essentially, his message is, yes, we are a military power in this region.

(00:28:57):
And here is a small but important piece of evidence.

(00:29:03):
Look at our special...

(00:29:06):
troopers.

(00:29:08):
They are on par with others participating in that parade.

(00:29:13):
Whereas Pashinyan is taking completely the opposite.

(00:29:17):
So he's not sending, and that's a message also to Aliyev, by the way, that we are

(00:29:26):
any military parades.

(00:29:28):
We don't want to show our military capacity and whatnot.

(00:29:34):
It's kind of a dove there.

(00:29:36):
Plus,

(00:29:37):
had he sent the military contingent,

(00:29:42):
it would be much more difficult for him to keep the line with the

(00:29:48):
with the Europeans, right?

(00:29:50):
So here you can say,

(00:29:52):
well,

(00:29:52):
I need to go because this is an important thing for Armenians,

(00:29:56):
for their contribution,

(00:29:58):
and my people would not understand if I didn't go,

(00:30:01):
but I didn't send the military contingent.

(00:30:04):
unlike my predecessors or unlike Aliyev.

(00:30:08):
So he's looking at every issue from the point of view how he's going to be saying

(00:30:14):
one thing in one place,

(00:30:16):
another thing in another place.

(00:30:17):
But I must say that he was visibly uncomfortable sitting next to Lukashenko in that parade.

(00:30:26):
And I don't know if an Armenian leader these days could have had the stomach to be

(00:30:33):
there when the Azeris were participating in that parade.

(00:30:38):
The very least he could have done was walked out right at that moment and then come back maybe.

(00:30:45):
But he didn't do that because he doesn't have, for him, it's a dumb deal.

(00:30:51):
We are sending the message to Turks and Azeris.

(00:30:55):
We are a new, different Armenians now.

(00:30:58):
more in line with what you expect to see when you're dealing with Armenians.

(00:31:03):
The past is past,

(00:31:05):
and the new Armenia and new Armenians that we're going to educate and we're going

(00:31:10):
to give them the new way of looking at the history is going to be very much

(00:31:15):
acceptable for you.

(00:31:16):
I hope you understand that that's not what I'm saying.

(00:31:21):
I myself have a very difficult time to reconcile with what he's doing, but

(00:31:27):
The fact is that that's what he's doing.

(00:31:29):
That's exactly what he's doing.

(00:31:31):
Yeah, absolutely.

(00:31:32):
He comes across that way as well.

(00:31:35):
Okay.

(00:31:35):
Well,

(00:31:35):
from one war commemoration,

(00:31:37):
let's go to another one that is actually still in progress,

(00:31:40):
Arthur.

(00:31:41):
Last week,

(00:31:41):
the conflict in Ukraine intensified as Russian forces launched a series of missile

(00:31:46):
strikes against infrastructure in Ukraine,

(00:31:49):
in Kyiv and Kharkov.

(00:31:50):
Meanwhile, US President Trump

(00:31:52):
ramped up support for EU hardliners in negotiations with Russia,

(00:31:56):
threatening sweeping sanctions if Moscow does not agree to unconditional ceasefire.

(00:32:01):
I mean, he changed a little bit the tone.

(00:32:04):
I don't know if you've seen his recent statements on this.

(00:32:07):
On Thursday,

(00:32:08):
there's going to be an important meeting in Istanbul,

(00:32:10):
and I urge Zelensky to go to that meeting.

(00:32:15):
There's a hope that they're going to sign something.

(00:32:17):
No worry about the need to have a ceasefire as a precondition for the talks.

(00:32:23):
That's exactly what Putin said.

(00:32:25):
In negotiation sense, these are moves setting up the table.

(00:32:32):
Who's going to be at the table?

(00:32:33):
What's going to be the agenda?

(00:32:35):
And Trump himself today, he said that, well, I'm going to be in the region.

(00:32:39):
I don't know what I'm going to be doing on Thursday.

(00:32:41):
But if I carve some time, I'm a parachute in Istanbul to be there for that important meeting.

(00:32:49):
I doubt Putin has any intention to go to that meeting.

(00:32:54):
He said very clearly that he's ready to send his negotiators there,

(00:32:58):
but whether he himself is going to go,

(00:33:01):
it's not clear right now,

(00:33:02):
and I doubt he's going to go.

(00:33:05):
And Zelensky took that as an opportunity to say that he is brave enough to go, right?

(00:33:11):
I'm there.

(00:33:12):
Putin, come.

(00:33:13):
This is kind of a macho game that he's trying to demonstrate,

(00:33:18):
and also to use that as a way to persuade Trump that,

(00:33:22):
see,

(00:33:23):
it's Putin who doesn't want to do this.

(00:33:25):
I'm ready.

(00:33:26):
I'm ready here.

(00:33:28):
Right now, he put his signature under the deal on the rare metals.

(00:33:33):
And he's doing everything.

(00:33:35):
I mean, in this game, blame game with Putin is Putin doesn't want it.

(00:33:41):
I'm ready to do it.

(00:33:42):
Putin says, no, they're not ready to do it.

(00:33:45):
I announced a three-day ceasefire,

(00:33:48):
and they didn't really respect it,

(00:33:50):
although it was an important holiday for us and for many Ukrainians.

(00:33:55):
So essentially, Zelensky

(00:33:58):
has been trying to improve his alternative, and his alternative is Europeans.

(00:34:03):
That's why they were in Kiev.

(00:34:07):
I think that combination I haven't seen in,

(00:34:11):
I don't remember even at the height,

(00:34:13):
in the very beginning of the war,

(00:34:15):
that kind of a combination when

(00:34:18):
Tusk,

(00:34:19):
Mertz,

(00:34:19):
Macron,

(00:34:21):
you have all the major European players,

(00:34:23):
Starmer,

(00:34:24):
obviously,

(00:34:24):
they're in Kiev to support him.

(00:34:28):
And they were putting it as an ultimatum to Russia.

(00:34:31):
Agree to a 30-day ceasefire and then negotiations will start.

(00:34:36):
As Macron said, no negotiations are possible while bullets are flying.

(00:34:41):
That's logical.

(00:34:42):
But of course, they're going to keep replenishing Ukraine while there's a ceasefire.

(00:34:47):
Well, that's exactly what Putin is saying.

(00:34:52):
The 30 days for what?

(00:34:54):
Are you sure that 30 days are enough to negotiate the deal?

(00:34:58):
Or do you think that's going to be possible to do just in one day,

(00:35:01):
get there and take the document from...

(00:35:06):
2022,

(00:35:06):
April 15,

(00:35:08):
even if they take that as a base,

(00:35:10):
that text of that agreement,

(00:35:12):
I think so many things have changed.

(00:35:14):
And I doubt that Zelensky is going to agree to the terms that were in that draft agreement,

(00:35:21):
although we know what happened,

(00:35:24):
right?

(00:35:24):
I mean, although Boris Johnson has been denying that he urged them not to

(00:35:29):
to go with that agreement.

(00:35:31):
There are all sorts of indications that, in fact, maybe things were changing on the battlefield.

(00:35:37):
And Ukrainians looked at it as a kind of, yes, we were there.

(00:35:43):
We almost were close to signing an agreement.

(00:35:46):
But who said that it's agreed if everything is not agreed?

(00:35:50):
So essentially, the war could have been over in 2022.

(00:35:56):
But Arthur,

(00:35:56):
I wanted to understand as a conflict management expert,

(00:35:59):
what do you think about Trump's tactics?

(00:36:01):
Is he helping or undermining his own efforts for a negotiated settlement at this

(00:36:06):
point when he sides with the EU hardliners?

(00:36:11):
Well, I think he needs to bring both parties to the table.

(00:36:14):
As I said, these are moves to set up the table, right?

(00:36:18):
So he thinks that he already has Zelensky, right?

(00:36:22):
Zelensky is going to come.

(00:36:24):
Yes, he has his precondition, the 30-day ceasefire, but he's coming.

(00:36:28):
So now it's the time to bring Putin to the table.

(00:36:31):
So how I'm going to get Putin to the table?

(00:36:35):
I need to show that I have a threat,

(00:36:38):
a real threat of doing something nasty if he chooses not to attend that very

(00:36:45):
important meeting.

(00:36:46):
So it's his way.

(00:36:48):
It's from the arsenal of transactional negotiations where to bring one party to the table,

(00:36:56):
you need to show them the consequences of not attending.

(00:37:01):
That's what he's doing.

(00:37:03):
But can he really go when push comes to shove?

(00:37:07):
Can he really go with those things?

(00:37:10):
Will other things from the transactional world and things that are very sweet for

(00:37:15):
him in dealing with Russians

(00:37:18):
because he's been trying to get as much as possible from Ukrainians transactionally

(00:37:24):
to compensate what he calls $350 billion assistance,

(00:37:30):
and to get something from Russians.

(00:37:31):
And with Russians, he's saying, see, Ukrainians are giving us this.

(00:37:35):
What can you give us?

(00:37:36):
And Russians are ready to please him.

(00:37:39):
We know that much of the discussion with Witkow was around those issues.

(00:37:44):
There were first leaks, and now there is proof that that might be really true.

(00:37:51):
An idea that the North Stream can be made again operational,

(00:37:56):
and this time Americans will step in,

(00:37:59):
and not Germans,

(00:38:00):
but Americans will be running the operation with Russians 50-50 or whatever they

(00:38:05):
agree on.

(00:38:07):
But Russians will be getting the gas,

(00:38:10):
selling it to Americans at below market price,

(00:38:14):
and then Americans will deliver it to Europeans and sell it at whatever price they

(00:38:19):
want to sell it to them.

(00:38:21):
Much higher,

(00:38:22):
obviously,

(00:38:22):
or equal to the gas that they're going to be supplying to the European markets.

(00:38:28):
Liquified gas, right?

(00:38:30):
So it's a great deal.

(00:38:32):
And there are many other deals that they've been talking about.

(00:38:35):
His view of this is, I need to show to my constituencies here in the U.S.

(00:38:41):
that I'm a dealmaker and I can bring peace when I'm saying so.

(00:38:46):
Because I'm the one who can do it.

(00:38:49):
I'm the hegemon.

(00:38:50):
And failure to do that, he needs some kind of a face saving to get out of it.

(00:38:56):
I think he now somewhat regrets that he said that he can quickly solve this one.

(00:39:01):
Maybe India and Pakistan was easier to...

(00:39:05):
to handle, right, to get it back to a frozen status.

(00:39:10):
There are some skirmishes still,

(00:39:12):
but essentially,

(00:39:14):
yes,

(00:39:14):
they're going to be back to a frozen status over Kashmir.

(00:39:19):
But Ukraine is very different because it's not just about Ukraine.

(00:39:24):
For Russians, it's about the new security architecture in Europe.

(00:39:29):
And to negotiate that,

(00:39:31):
you really need to step beyond just the Ukraine as an item on the agenda.

(00:39:39):
Are they willing to expand that agenda?

(00:39:42):
And if they are, obviously those negotiations are going to take much longer.

(00:39:47):
Plus,

(00:39:48):
there is the battlefield calculus,

(00:39:50):
as some of the observers have correctly observed,

(00:39:53):
and that calculus is not in the favor of Ukrainians.

(00:39:58):
Even now, during this celebration of

(00:40:01):
May 9th,

(00:40:02):
Ukrainians made attempts to carve some space,

(00:40:06):
get some space,

(00:40:07):
but they were thrown back or not able to get in control of the territories with

(00:40:14):
losses again,

(00:40:15):
and they're losing.

(00:40:16):
Yes, it's not very fast, but they're losing, most importantly,

(00:40:21):
human capital, and mobilization is the weakest point right now for Ukrainians.

(00:40:28):
On this topic of Ukraine,

(00:40:30):
I know that we should talk about India-Pakistan,

(00:40:33):
and we'll go to it,

(00:40:34):
but I do want to ask,

(00:40:35):
because Armenia's entire economy is dependent heavily on Russia,

(00:40:41):
so how likely would you assess any deal

(00:40:45):
falling through, so failing, and these negotiations failing.

(00:40:49):
And what is Armenia's vulnerability to these sweeping sanctions?

(00:40:55):
In a few words, if you can say something about that.

(00:40:59):
Well, it will depend on the scope of these sanctions.

(00:41:02):
It will depend on what Trump decides to enact.

(00:41:06):
And Europeans already are preparing the 17th package of sanctions,

(00:41:11):
no matter what happens,

(00:41:12):
by the way,

(00:41:13):
in Istanbul.

(00:41:14):
They're going to go ahead with that.

(00:41:16):
And the British enacted some sanctions on May 9th, on that very day.

(00:41:24):
And those,

(00:41:25):
interestingly,

(00:41:26):
if you look at who's sanctioned by the Brits now,

(00:41:30):
there are some Azerbaijani names,

(00:41:32):
individuals,

(00:41:33):
who were involved in trading Russian oil.

(00:41:37):
Yeah, the so-called dark fleet, shadow fleet.

(00:41:40):
Well, the dark fleet is the ships.

(00:41:43):
These are individuals who were involved in the trade.

(00:41:48):
I don't know many details right now,

(00:41:50):
about what specifically gave those grounds to Starmer and his cabinet,

(00:41:57):
but apparently they had evidence that these individuals were involved in trading

(00:42:02):
the Russian oil in Europe.

(00:42:05):
But it's also somewhat hypocritical,

(00:42:08):
because much as they speak about sanctions,

(00:42:11):
and Merz is talking about defending Ukraine till the end,

(00:42:17):
they are buying Russian gas.

(00:42:20):
Right now.

(00:42:20):
Rebranded Russian gas.

(00:42:23):
Yes.

(00:42:25):
In the port of Rotterdam and in other ports,

(00:42:30):
Again, the liquid gas that Russia is supplying, they're buying Russian gas.

(00:42:36):
And it's not a big secret.

(00:42:39):
I mean, everybody knows it's happening.

(00:42:41):
And in fact,

(00:42:42):
they have increased their purchases because they are facing crisis,

(00:42:46):
energy crisis in many European countries.

(00:42:50):
So to go back to Armenia and Armenia's vulnerabilities,

(00:42:56):
If, and this is if, right?

(00:42:57):
It's a scenario.

(00:42:59):
If Trump really goes ahead with the sanctions,

(00:43:02):
if Russians refuse to participate,

(00:43:04):
but they are not refusing to participate,

(00:43:06):
it's who's going to participate,

(00:43:08):
right?

(00:43:08):
They will always have this way of saying,

(00:43:11):
no,

(00:43:11):
no,

(00:43:11):
we're participating,

(00:43:12):
and negotiations can take a long time.

(00:43:15):
But let's assume that that scenario of Trump enacting new sanctions is going to happen.

(00:43:22):
Depending on what the scope and targeting of those sanctions might be,

(00:43:27):
it may affect obviously Armenia,

(00:43:29):
because Armenia has been taking

(00:43:31):
huge opportunity of kind of re-exporting stuff to Russia.

(00:43:37):
The trade, I think, up to 70% right now is to the Eurasian Economic Union.

(00:43:46):
So the cost of that for the Armenian economy can be huge, obviously.

(00:43:52):
And in that scenario, a lot will depend what Pashinyan is going to choose to do.

(00:43:57):
One thing is obvious, his government,

(00:44:00):
despite the fact that for seven years they've been in place,

(00:44:05):
they haven't really developed many viable alternatives so that they could say no to Russians.

(00:44:14):
Those sensitivities are going to be huge.

(00:44:17):
And it was those sensitivities and vulnerabilities,

(00:44:20):
especially with summer coming,

(00:44:23):
apricot trade and agricultural produce and whatnot,

(00:44:26):
and not just that,

(00:44:27):
many other things in addition,

(00:44:30):
forced him to go to Moscow.

(00:44:32):
That was also part of the calculus.

(00:44:34):
Yeah,

(00:44:35):
I don't know how he's going to compromise on this issue,

(00:44:37):
especially when it's the oligarchs who back him who are making most of the profit

(00:44:41):
from that trade and retrade.

(00:44:44):
But Arthur, you mentioned India and Pakistan.

(00:44:47):
So let's go from one war to another.

(00:44:49):
Tensions flared over there just about three weeks ago.

(00:44:52):
Crisis began with a militant attack on Indian-administered Kashmir,

(00:44:57):
killed 26,

(00:44:58):
mostly tourists,

(00:45:00):
I think it was.

(00:45:01):
These terrorists were actually Pakistan-based groups,

(00:45:05):
and India launched missile strikes on Pakistani air bases,

(00:45:09):
prompting a retaliation involving Turkish drones.

(00:45:12):
In response, India activated its Russian-made S-400 air defense systems.

(00:45:19):
And on May 10,

(00:45:19):
just a couple of days ago,

(00:45:21):
Trump announced a ceasefire between the two countries.

(00:45:23):
And of course, both of them report ongoing violations.

(00:45:27):
So the conflict has drawn in regional powers,

(00:45:29):
Turkey,

(00:45:29):
Azerbaijan backing Pakistan and Israel supporting India.

(00:45:34):
Meanwhile,

(00:45:35):
these regional alliances remain very fluid as Azerbaijan and Israel align against

(00:45:39):
Armenia and Iran,

(00:45:41):
while Israel and Turkey clash over Syria.

(00:45:43):
So...

(00:45:44):
Can you explain why this escalation happened and why now?

(00:45:48):
And also,

(00:45:49):
is there an opportunity for Armenia to leverage this fluidity and make something of

(00:45:54):
an opportunity for itself?

(00:45:57):
Well, I don't want to go way back to 1947.

(00:46:02):
Yeah, I think we have very little time.

(00:46:07):
And then the ceasefire, which was more or less permanent 1972, the frozen conflict,

(00:46:15):
has had its dimension.

(00:46:16):
By the way,

(00:46:17):
it also has the so-called line of control,

(00:46:21):
where India controls about 45 percent of the territory,

(00:46:26):
Pakistan controls the rest,

(00:46:28):
and then also Pakistan has given some territory to China,

(00:46:33):
and China is also big in this conflict and confrontation.

(00:46:39):
Why it happened now, I mean, this is not the first time, by the way.

(00:46:43):
I remember,

(00:46:44):
if I'm not mistaken,

(00:46:45):
September 2016,

(00:46:46):
when Pakistani-supported militants in Kashmir attacked an Indian base,

(00:46:53):
and I think 18 Indian soldiers were killed.

(00:46:57):
And they were on the brink of escalation at that time, but they avoided that escalation then.

(00:47:05):
Then another point that could bring escalation was the abrogation of Article 370 of

(00:47:13):
the Indian Constitution.

(00:47:15):
which long has been demanded by the Indian nationalists.

(00:47:20):
Essentially, that article was giving a special status to Jammu and Kashmir.

(00:47:27):
And now,

(00:47:28):
according to India,

(00:47:30):
it's Indian territory period,

(00:47:32):
just like other provinces of India,

(00:47:35):
directly controlled from New Delhi.

(00:47:39):
That was 2019.

(00:47:40):
And since then, I think Pakistanis reinvigorated the support of the militants in Kashmir.

(00:47:49):
And as you probably know,

(00:47:52):
there's significant Muslim population,

(00:47:54):
I mean,

(00:47:55):
the division there,

(00:47:56):
six very small numbers.

(00:47:58):
But

(00:48:00):
Up to 30 percent are Muslim.

(00:48:02):
So Muslim militancy on the rise.

(00:48:06):
And sooner or later, something like that could have happened.

(00:48:09):
It was just a matter of time when this frozen conflict could erupt.

(00:48:14):
And interestingly, UN has had its observer mission since way back, I think.

(00:48:23):
But the functions of that observer mission are almost nonexistent.

(00:48:29):
On paper, they exist.

(00:48:30):
There are people who are there to implement some observing, but none of it is really working.

(00:48:38):
There are lessons to learn from those kinds of arrangements.

(00:48:43):
So that's one.

(00:48:44):
Number two, what's the need for Armenia and how Armenia can make use of it?

(00:48:52):
Obviously,

(00:48:52):
Armenia has had much better relations with India,

(00:48:57):
and with Pakistan is,

(00:48:59):
I think,

(00:49:00):
one of the countries that has not recognized Armenia and does not have any

(00:49:06):
diplomatic relations.

(00:49:07):
They've been fully supportive of Azerbaijan on this,

(00:49:10):
although,

(00:49:11):
interestingly,

(00:49:12):
the conflict there is the reverse of Karabakh,

(00:49:15):
right?

(00:49:16):
But it doesn't matter.

(00:49:17):
as it doesn't matter who's,

(00:49:19):
uh,

(00:49:20):
whose ally in,

(00:49:21):
uh,

(00:49:22):
uh,

(00:49:22):
this world disorder,

(00:49:24):
which more,

(00:49:24):
uh,

(00:49:25):
looks more like,

(00:49:26):
um,

(00:49:26):
um,

(00:49:27):
early 20th century arrangements,

(00:49:29):
when you could be in a tactical alliance with one group of countries,

(00:49:34):
but at the same time,

(00:49:36):
building an alliance with a country that is in hostile relations with one of the

(00:49:41):
members of your alliance.

(00:49:43):
So these are very tactical, not really strategic alliances.

(00:49:47):
They're based on very short-term satisfaction of the interests and needs of

(00:49:55):
those who create those fleeting alliances.

(00:49:58):
And Armenia, I think, can be very careful in how it treats this one.

(00:50:07):
But it's obvious for me that there are many more opportunities now to even

(00:50:15):
reinvigorate the relations with India.

(00:50:19):
which both in terms of trade and in terms of even military procurement has been

(00:50:26):
significant and can be even more significant in the coming years.

(00:50:32):
But I think that's one of the areas where you have to be extremely cautious because

(00:50:38):
as you noted,

(00:50:41):
There are different big players like China, for instance, right?

(00:50:44):
I mean, you don't want to necessarily get to hostile relations with China by...

(00:50:52):
orally going, supporting India in this.

(00:50:57):
And this has to be very precise diplomatic calculus.

(00:51:01):
Some,

(00:51:02):
I haven't seen it really happen,

(00:51:04):
but some say that Xi Jinping in Moscow was trying to avoid Pashinyan,

(00:51:10):
to avoid any handshake with him or avoid any communication with him.

(00:51:15):
And that's not surprising because Armenia has been acting like a

(00:51:20):
an elephant in China shop because the minute they came to power,

(00:51:28):
for whatever reason,

(00:51:29):
they signed up to this new camp that was inaugurated by State Department against China.

(00:51:37):
Why did they do that?

(00:51:38):
What did we gain from it?

(00:51:39):
So I'm just giving that as an example of very uncouth diplomacy.

(00:51:44):
You have to play it very smart and calculate well.

(00:51:48):
But given the miserable shape of our diplomacy and the head of that diplomacy is

(00:51:56):
still Pashinyan,

(00:51:58):
although Mirzoyan is the Foreign Affairs Minister,

(00:52:01):
I'd be surprised if he's not going to make mistakes on this one too.

(00:52:07):
Luckily for us, the ceasefire can

(00:52:10):
hold and then it can be a more quieter situation where you don't need to side with

(00:52:17):
one camp or the other.

(00:52:19):
So let's talk a little bit about Armenia and Azerbaijan.

(00:52:22):
And to me, it's nauseating to talk about this because every time we say the same thing,

(00:52:28):
But we're obliged because Armenian officials again,

(00:52:31):
one more time,

(00:52:32):
kept repeating that peace with Azerbaijan or signing the peace deal is near imminent.

(00:52:39):
Let me remind you that since Armenia announced that this peace deal was agreed upon,

(00:52:46):
Border shootings have been nonstop.

(00:52:48):
Before that, you know, they were even like, you know, it was two months of relative quiet.

(00:52:54):
But now,

(00:52:55):
like ever since they announced that there's a peace is near imminent,

(00:52:58):
every day there's border shootings,

(00:52:59):
houses being damaged,

(00:53:01):
terrorized villagers.

(00:53:02):
And EU observers are there to see that, right?

(00:53:05):
And the EU observers are there, but are not specifically making any noise about it.

(00:53:10):
You know,

(00:53:10):
they're,

(00:53:11):
I don't know,

(00:53:11):
maybe they were having lunch at that time or,

(00:53:14):
you know,

(00:53:14):
they were having a nap.

(00:53:15):
But the person you said,

(00:53:17):
Mirzoyan,

(00:53:19):
who unfortunately is the Armenian foreign minister,

(00:53:21):
said everything is agreed upon.

(00:53:23):
But...

(00:53:24):
Azerbaijan, for some reason, keeps making contradictory statements.

(00:53:27):
How dare they?

(00:53:29):
Anyway, what is the Pashinyan team smoking?

(00:53:32):
Please tell us, and where can I get some of that?

(00:53:35):
And also, what do we believe about the real state affairs in these talks?

(00:53:40):
Well, it's probably more appropriate about Mirzoyan when it comes to smoking some substances.

(00:53:47):
I think, by and large, they agreed on maybe some of the...

(00:53:54):
Important points.

(00:53:55):
We don't know.

(00:53:57):
Again,

(00:53:57):
we don't know exactly what they haven't agreed on,

(00:53:59):
but Azeris are not making any secrets about it.

(00:54:04):
They want more because they can see that they can get more.

(00:54:09):
And now, how do you get more?

(00:54:11):
You put pressure.

(00:54:12):
If Armenia declares that its vision,

(00:54:16):
its existence,

(00:54:17):
is pinned to that peace agreement and to these corridors that are going to open and

(00:54:24):
trade and prosperity on par with post-war Europe in the Caucasus,

(00:54:31):
that's the model that he's probably thinking about.

(00:54:35):
We are not in Europe.

(00:54:36):
Azerbaijan is not Germany, and we are not France in some ways.

(00:54:43):
So the calculus of Azerbaijan is,

(00:54:47):
if that's something that they really need,

(00:54:51):
their diet to get it,

(00:54:53):
What you do, it's very common for the Asian bargaining tactics.

(00:55:00):
If I know that you want something badly from me, what do I do?

(00:55:05):
I raise the price.

(00:55:08):
I raise the price.

(00:55:09):
I want more of it.

(00:55:10):
And I can see that you need it to demonstrate to your people that at least in some

(00:55:16):
areas you've been successful.

(00:55:18):
Because the program of this government from 2021

(00:55:24):
has nothing to do with the reality.

(00:55:26):
None of the promises has been to their constituency,

(00:55:29):
to their voters,

(00:55:31):
has been implemented,

(00:55:32):
none.

(00:55:33):
On the contrary, they've been doing exactly the opposite of it.

(00:55:37):
Azerbaijan demands put an end to the Minsk Group.

(00:55:40):
The program of the government,

(00:55:44):
2021,

(00:55:44):
says that our solemn promise to our voters is that we're going to cooperate with

(00:55:50):
the Minsk Group to bring a just solution to Karabakh,

(00:55:55):
blah,

(00:55:55):
blah,

(00:55:55):
blah.

(00:55:57):
Now Pashinyan says we need to quit Pashinyan

(00:56:00):
We need to put an end to the Minsk group.

(00:56:04):
Number two, and probably more important, is the constitution.

(00:56:09):
They want the constitution to be changed,

(00:56:10):
and to be changed the way they want,

(00:56:12):
as if they're drafting our constitution now.

(00:56:16):
Because for Aliyev,

(00:56:18):
Armenia is the country that was defeated,

(00:56:21):
and it needs to take the vote of a defeated party,

(00:56:25):
right?

(00:56:26):
Roman statement, right?

(00:56:28):
Woe to the defeated.

(00:56:30):
So you have to, and he wants to put a complete end to that.

(00:56:35):
And as he observes Pashinyan and his government, he sees that I can get even more.

(00:56:42):
If not in writing, then somehow in secret protocols or some things that they're going to sign.

(00:56:50):
And if they don't implement it,

(00:56:52):
I can show it to everybody that it was signed,

(00:56:56):
that they agreed to do that.

(00:56:57):
That can be about the border demarcation.

(00:57:00):
That can be...

(00:57:02):
I do not rule even that out,

(00:57:04):
that Pashinyan's government may say that in principle they would not object if

(00:57:10):
Azerbaijanis returned to the new real Armenia,

(00:57:15):
right?

(00:57:15):
Because we as a European and tolerant nation have to learn how to live with our neighbors,

(00:57:24):
right?

(00:57:24):
And kind of open it up.

(00:57:26):
So the list of demands from the Azerbaijani side is increasing.

(00:57:32):
But because the negotiations are happening through closed channels,

(00:57:36):
really tightly sealed,

(00:57:39):
Mirzoyan is not allowed to say even what they demand.

(00:57:42):
Therefore, he says, I don't even understand what they are doing.

(00:57:46):
No, he probably is one of the very few who knows what exactly Azerbaijan is demanding now.

(00:57:53):
knowing perfectly well that 2026 is coming,

(00:57:57):
next year is going to be,

(00:57:59):
let's say,

(00:58:00):
starting probably end of this year,

(00:58:03):
you're going to be into your electoral cycle,

(00:58:06):
and you really badly need that piece of paper that is going to be the same piece.

(00:58:13):
And if that's what you really, really want, then... The price will be higher.

(00:58:17):
Yeah.

(00:58:17):
Right, you need to give us more, more concessions.

(00:58:21):
So Mirzoyan may be saying this to pretend that he doesn't know anything about it,

(00:58:26):
but I doubt that he doesn't.

(00:58:30):
There is a very small coterie of people around Pashinyan who are well informed

(00:58:35):
about what's going on there,

(00:58:37):
but

(00:58:38):
They know that if they go public with those things and say,

(00:58:41):
we cannot do this,

(00:58:42):
this is what Azerbaijan demands and we're not going to do that,

(00:58:45):
that is not related to the constitution because he's willing to change the constitution.

(00:58:51):
But other things that they demand, he knows it's going to be costly for him if he does that.

(00:58:56):
Therefore, they keep it very quiet.

(00:58:59):
But that's most likely what's happening.

(00:59:02):
That's the negotiation dynamic.

(00:59:06):
Arthur, just a quick question before we end the show.

(00:59:09):
There's a new pope, Leo XIV, who is the first American pope.

(00:59:13):
I was wondering if you had any thoughts about what the Armenian Church's

(00:59:17):
relationship should be with this new pope,

(00:59:20):
what the expectations should be,

(00:59:21):
considering the fact that the Vatican had recently hosted an Azerbaijani propaganda conference.

(00:59:28):
Any thoughts about this?

(00:59:30):
Well,

(00:59:30):
I think this whole issue goes to the challenge that we've had for so long now,

(00:59:38):
for more than seven years now.

(00:59:41):
For us to be effective in getting the church to do what is possible here,

(00:59:48):
it has to work in tandem with the state.

(00:59:52):
Because, for instance, do we have Catholic Armenians in the United States?

(01:00:00):
Sure we do.

(01:00:04):
Could they reach out to the new pope?

(01:00:06):
Yes, they could.

(01:00:07):
But what is it that they,

(01:00:09):
other than the religious issues,

(01:00:12):
what are the things that they could approach him with?

(01:00:16):
If the Armenian state that has the ambassador to Vatican is not acting on egregious

(01:00:24):
demonstration of Azeri falsifications in Vatican,

(01:00:30):
The state, and that is the ambassador, is not doing anything.

(01:00:35):
What can the church do in that case?

(01:00:37):
Not much, really.

(01:00:39):
They can,

(01:00:39):
certainly they will be doing,

(01:00:40):
I'm sure,

(01:00:41):
but they're not going to be as effective as they could have been had there been

(01:00:47):
this tandem of state and church.

(01:00:51):
The same goes to diasporan organizations and the state.

(01:00:56):
So whenever you have this split, and that split is significant, it's really a huge cleavage now.

(01:01:05):
It's the one that is going to be to our detriment to put out a united action.

(01:01:14):
or mobilizing united action to support Armenian interests.

(01:01:18):
Why?

(01:01:19):
Because those very interests are interpreted very differently.

(01:01:23):
You have the state leader who has a very different interpretation of what are

(01:01:28):
national interests,

(01:01:30):
and you have lay Armenians who have,

(01:01:35):
especially in Diaspora,

(01:01:36):
I hope,

(01:01:37):
who,

(01:01:37):
just as Hovik and you,

(01:01:41):
the blood starts boiling once you hear about the genocide and what is ready to

(01:01:48):
compromise on the issues of identity.

(01:01:50):
So I think the new pope overall most likely will continue in the footsteps of the previous pope.

(01:02:03):
He was brought from Peru by Francis to Vatican, was given an important job.

(01:02:12):
That means there was trust, and that means that he supported what Francis was trying to do.

(01:02:17):
I've also read that he's a little bit cooler on LGBTQ agenda,

(01:02:24):
but on other issues,

(01:02:25):
most likely he's going to continue to push the reforms of the Catholic Church.

(01:02:31):
And does Armenian Church have a way to participate in a dialogue on those reforms?

(01:02:38):
Yes, of course we do.

(01:02:40):
And not only the Armenian Church, I mean the apostolic church, but also the Armenian Catholics.

(01:02:47):
And I don't know the numbers.

(01:02:49):
I'm not sure how many there are, but there are.

(01:02:52):
And they could also be a very vocal, very effective ways of getting our messages to to Vatican.

(01:03:01):
But if combined with the state, I mean, that's that's

(01:03:04):
Well, that's the key issue.

(01:03:06):
Just about anything really eventually goes back to the state,

(01:03:10):
because even the diaspora and efforts,

(01:03:12):
when you try to lobby for something,

(01:03:14):
request something from our representatives,

(01:03:16):
they say,

(01:03:17):
well,

(01:03:17):
your country is not on board with that.

(01:03:20):
And I'm sure that the same was said by Vatican.

(01:03:24):
If Armenian organizations approach the Vatican on the Azeri conference on Albanian

(01:03:31):
churches and whatnot,

(01:03:32):
falsification of that stuff,

(01:03:34):
I think they could have said the same thing.

(01:03:36):
They could have said,

(01:03:37):
well,

(01:03:38):
we understand that the Armenian state is trying to achieve peace with Azeris.

(01:03:44):
We didn't hear anything from the Armenian state,

(01:03:47):
and therefore we considered it kosher for them to be spreading lies here in Vatican

(01:03:53):
about Christianity.

(01:03:56):
Okay, well, let's wrap up our topics today.

(01:03:59):
We're out of time.

(01:04:00):
I'd like to ask each of you if there's something on your mind that you would like

(01:04:03):
to share with our listeners.

(01:04:06):
And I know that Hovik has a topic,

(01:04:07):
so I think I'll go straight to him and I'll give Arthur a minute to think about

(01:04:12):
what he wants to talk about.

(01:04:14):
Hovik?

(01:04:16):
Well,

(01:04:16):
the only thing that I wanted to let our listeners and viewers know about was that

(01:04:22):
unlike the much fabled Europe where protesters can throw eggs at Macron and not

(01:04:29):
suffer any consequences,

(01:04:32):
in Armenia,

(01:04:33):
if you call the wife of Pashinyan a “hoghatu”,

(01:04:38):
Essentially, that means a giver of land.

(01:04:42):
A surrenderer of land.

(01:04:45):
You will be fined 375,000 drams for that as a penalty.

(01:04:52):
And this appears to be completely normal for all the Western liberal...

(01:04:57):
ambassadors,

(01:04:58):
observers,

(01:04:59):
because I haven't seen this anywhere in the news and we had to dig through Armenian

(01:05:03):
sources only and opposition sources only to discover it.

(01:05:08):
And it doesn't matter if you're like a 70-year-old grandma,

(01:05:11):
I mean,

(01:05:12):
or a grandfather,

(01:05:13):
but in this case 69-year-old Tigran Dermoyan was charged for simply calling Anna

(01:05:19):
Hakopyan a “Hoghatu”.

(01:05:21):
A well-deserved name, I believe.

(01:05:25):
But yeah, that is the case of justice in Armenia.

(01:05:29):
And the judge, I believe, well, I don't know who the judge is, but I think it's the same judge.

(01:05:33):
He's famous for giving pro-government rulings.

(01:05:38):
But I mean, this is just ridiculous.

(01:05:40):
But that's approximately for our international audience.

(01:05:44):
That's approximately a thousand dollar fine,

(01:05:47):
which is two or three months of pay for the average worker.

(01:05:51):
How much is it for a pensioner?

(01:05:53):
Yeah,

(01:05:53):
well,

(01:05:54):
and two,

(01:05:54):
three months of pay,

(01:05:55):
but also multiple more times that for the minimal salary,

(01:05:59):
if you consider that maybe like 20 times the minimal salary.

(01:06:03):
For a pension, it can be a year.

(01:06:06):
And that's my point for a 69 year old person.

(01:06:09):
That's a year of their pension.

(01:06:11):
Arthur, something on your mind that you would like to share?

(01:06:14):
Well, I'm surprised that Hovik is surprised.

(01:06:19):
In 2018,

(01:06:21):
when Mirzoyan made this trip to Dushanbe,

(01:06:25):
I was trying to test if they really stand by their words that they're going to be

(01:06:29):
transparent and they're going to put out all the expenses that were made to fly...

(01:06:36):
the Armenian presidential jet to Dushanbe.

(01:06:44):
They certainly didn't do that.

(01:06:46):
Later,

(01:06:46):
they adopted a law by which this kind of information cannot be disclosed to the

(01:06:54):
public because it's state secret.

(01:06:57):
From that point, it was obvious to me that these guys are not about the things that they

(01:07:05):
speak about in public, you know, in squares, when they promise things, all of that is fake.

(01:07:15):
They say one thing, but they act as usual as normal.

(01:07:20):
And since it was the election of a new pope,

(01:07:24):
and the new pope,

(01:07:25):
the American,

(01:07:26):
spent a lot of time in Peru,

(01:07:27):
and he was with the Augustinian order,

(01:07:34):
I can remind you of St.

(01:07:36):
Augustine's famous quote where he said,

(01:07:40):
a state that does not uphold justice is just a band of robbers.

(01:07:48):
So in a sense,

(01:07:50):
none of the institutions that we have really work the way they should in a republic

(01:07:56):
and to say nothing about democracy.

(01:07:58):
So we shouldn't be surprised at what these guys are doing.

(01:08:02):
And the battles that our opposition parliamentarians are trying to wage in the parliament,

(01:08:10):
well,

(01:08:11):
I commend them for what they're doing,

(01:08:13):
but I at the same time understand that in real political terms,

(01:08:17):
there is not much that they can gain other than awareness of some of the public

(01:08:23):
that we live in a country that does not stand up to the standards of a true republic.

(01:08:30):
Where you have...

(01:08:32):
independent

(01:08:34):
judiciary, and executive is separated from the legislative.

(01:08:40):
That's one thing that we should all be concerned about, both in Diaspora and here in Armenia.

(01:08:47):
So I wouldn't want to end with a very pessimistic take on what's going on here.

(01:08:55):
I'd say that I also have some very conservative hopes that

(01:09:04):
The process of getting to peace, the first step this Thursday can be made.

(01:09:12):
And when I say the first step, I also understand that it's not going to be a quick process.

(01:09:17):
It's not going to end right there.

(01:09:21):
For us, it's going to be very important how it ends.

(01:09:24):
You mean in Istanbul or in Turkey?

(01:09:28):
All right.

(01:09:28):
All right.

(01:09:29):
We're going to leave it there for today.

(01:09:31):
Thank you, Arthur, for joining us.

(01:09:32):
Very much appreciated your time and your insight.

(01:09:36):
Yeah.

(01:09:36):
Good luck.

(01:09:38):
Yeah.

(01:09:38):
Bye-bye.

(01:09:39):
Bye-bye.

(01:09:39):
Bye.

(01:09:42):
Okay, that was our week in review for May 11, 2025.

(01:09:46):
We recorded it on May 12, 2025.

(01:09:49):
We've been talking with Arthur G. Martirosyan, a senior consultant with CM Partners.

(01:09:55):
In 1994,

(01:09:56):
after graduating from Yale University,

(01:09:58):
he joined Conflict Management Group and Harvard Negotiations Project.

(01:10:02):
And since then,

(01:10:03):
he has worked on conflicts in the former Soviet Union,

(01:10:05):
the Middle East,

(01:10:06):
the Balkans,

(01:10:07):
Africa,

(01:10:08):
and Latin America.

(01:10:11):
And for more information on all our guests, you can go to the page for each episode.

(01:10:17):
So podcasts.groong.org slash episode number.

(01:10:21):
I believe this is 345.

(01:10:24):
435.

(01:10:25):
435 probably.

(01:10:25):
Anyway, you will see it in the description.

(01:10:30):
Go there, read up on our guests.

(01:10:32):
While you're on our page, there's a little donate button at the top.

(01:10:35):
Click on that and see if you can help us out and keep the lights on.

(01:10:39):
We would very much appreciate it.

(01:10:41):
uh yeah and thank you in general and also don't forget to comment thank you take

(01:10:47):
care we'll talk to you next week bye


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