Latest news with #Azerbaijan-Armenia


The Hill
a day ago
- Politics
- The Hill
Bolton says Trump ‘wants a Nobel Peace Prize more than anything else'
Former national security adviser John Bolton, a vocal critic of President Trump's foreign policy decisions, said the president 'wants the Nobel Peace Prize more than anything else,' adding that 'the way to his heart,' which he said leaders like Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu discovered, is to offer to nominate him. While discussing Trump's recent foreign policy moves, including hosting the Azerbaijan-Armenia deal and helping broker a peace deal between Congo and Rwanda, Bolton argued that he doesn't believe 'what he has done materially changes the situation in any of those circumstances, or several others he's mentioned,' mentioning many Indians were upset that he took credit for mediating a ceasefire between Pakistan and India after clashes in May. 'I think what Trump has done is make it clear that he wants the Nobel Peace Prize more than anything else and the way to his heart, as Pakistani chief of staff [Asim] Munir found, Bibi Netanyahu found, offer to nominate him,' Bolton said. Bolton's criticism comes after multiple figures, including Netanyahu, White House trade adviser Peter Navarro and Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister Sun Chanthol, mentioned Trump being nominated for various Nobel Peace Prizes. However, Bolton, who criticized Trump's upcoming meeting in Alaska with Russian President Vladimir Putin, said Trump's moves haven't changed anything in foreign policy. 'In Thailand/Cambodia, he simply threatened tariffs if they didn't sign a deal,' he said. 'They've signed a deal. Nothing has changed. And the real kicker in Azerbaijan and Armenia was the Russians allowing Azerbaijan to take control of Nagorno-Karabakh in the past year.


Time of India
4 days ago
- Politics
- Time of India
'War ended, thanks to TRUMP': Armenia, Azerbaijan to sign peace pact at White House; US president takes credit
US President Donald Trump (Image Credit: AP) US President Donald Trump has added two more names to the list of nations where he claims to have brokered peace — Armenia and Azerbaijan. On Thursday, US President announced that the long-feuding neighbours are expected to sign a historic peace agreement at the White House on Friday, potentially bringing an end to decades of hostility, and this is all because of "TRUMP". Trump indicated that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and President Ilham Aliyev would sign agreements with the United States to explore joint economic ventures, aiming to maximise the South Caucasus Region's potential. "I look forward to hosting the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, and the Prime Minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan, at the White House tomorrow for a Historic Peace Summit. These two Nations have been at War for many years, resulting in the deaths of thousands of people. Many Leaders have tried to end the War, with no success, until now, thanks to 'TRUMP.' My Administration has been engaged with both sides for quite some time. Tomorrow, President Aliyev AND Prime Minister Pashinyan will join me at the White House for an official Peace Signing Ceremony," Trump said. "The United States will also sign Bilateral Agreements with both Countries to pursue Economic opportunities together, so we can fully unlock the potential of the South Caucasus Region. I am very proud of these courageous Leaders for doing the right thing for the Great People of Armenia and Azerbaijan. It will be a Historic Day for Armenia, Azerbaijan, the United States, and, THE WORLD. See you then! DJT," he added. This agreement could resolve long-standing conflicts and enable the reopening of vital transport routes across the South Caucasus, which have remained closed since the early 1990s. Three anonymous US officials revealed to AP that the agreements include establishing a significant transit corridor across the region, which had previously hindered peace negotiations. According to these officials, the US would receive leasing rights to develop this corridor, designated as the Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity. The corridor would connect Azerbaijan to its Nakhchivan region, currently separated by 32 kilometres of Armenian territory. The planned transit corridor would incorporate railway lines, oil and gas pipelines, and fibre optic cables, facilitating goods movement and eventually passenger travel. Private corporations, rather than the US government, would finance the corridor's construction. The agreement resulted from negotiations following Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff's visit to Baku, Azerbaijan's capital, earlier this year. Azerbaijan-Armenia dispute The Karabakh region has been a source of conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan for nearly forty years. During Soviet rule, the predominantly Armenian region maintained autonomy within Azerbaijan. Tensions between Christian Armenians and Muslim Azerbaijanis, influenced by the 1915 Ottoman Turkish massacre of 1.5 million Armenians, intensified as the Soviet Union declined. The region attempted to join Armenia in 1988, sparking clashes. Following Armenia's independence from the dissolving USSR in 1991, the situation escalated into warfare, resulting in approximately 30,000 deaths and one million displaced persons, AP news agency reported. The 1994 ceasefire left Armenian forces, supported by Yerevan, controlling both the region and significant portions of Azerbaijan. International mediation proved unsuccessful. Azerbaijan launched a campaign to reclaim the region in September 2020, supported by NATO-member Turkey, which shares strong ethnic and cultural ties with Azerbaijan. The six-week conflict, involving artillery, rockets and drones, resulted in over 6,700 casualties. Azerbaijani forces regained control of areas outside Karabakh and within it. A Russian-brokered peace agreement led to the deployment of 2,000 peacekeepers. Azerbaijan completely reclaimed Karabakh in September 2023 through rapid military action. Subsequently, nearly all of Nagorno-Karabakh's ethnic Armenian population, over 100,000 people, fled to Armenia within a week.


Express Tribune
29-05-2025
- Politics
- Express Tribune
Preparing for the next round
Listen to article Three things stand out from the four-day war: one, it began on a conventional note but quickly progressed to what is increasingly likely to constitute warfare in the modern age where perceptually a full conventional war is replaced with something more digestible, even if equally devastative; second, elements constituting modern warfare, missiles, Kamikaze Drones, loitering munitions were incrementally added to the menu to avoid the attribution of a full-scale war while still retaining an offensive intent – both sides mimicked each other in a mirror image and in reflex; third, there was a noise of multi-domain application as a part of conventional kinetic operations – these were impactful in a short war – and as a stand-alone resort as weapons of economic degradation to exhibit their potential for long-term pain. There is another telling observation that is escaping attention; these were gentlemanly applications in sequence rather than as a combined force 'parallel' application in one solid punch meant to knock the opponent out. And while the ceasefire is a temporary pause, and not cessation of hostilities, Indians cannot stop overemphasising the point – one must be careful in enunciating what may help evil get stronger. In the same vein, the plethora of experts that have emerged in the last two weeks neither do good to themselves nor to the country at large by pontificating on half-baked knowledge of modern warfare. It will help to cease such 'expert' haberdash. Drones have a specific but limited role. A lot is made of their intelligence function and foot-printing the electro-magnetic spectrum and fixing locations but as warriors on both sides know there are enough resources to do so in peace time and war through what is now known parallel domains and satellite monitoring. Drones do however instill a psychological irritation of an impending disaster especially when these are mixed with explosive payloads – the type extensively used in the Azerbaijan-Armenia war where from multiple faulty lessons were derived. The sheen and the surprise are both long-lost. They however do have a function with current capabilities in unique, permissive employment against forces which are irregular and dispersed in inaccessible regions. As Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicles (UCAV) they may in the future have a touted role of wingman to a manned fighter but that is highly uncertain and a long way out. In the four-day war, drones were used as gap-fillers in long pauses as warring sides pined for an intervention to help climb out of the morass. Missile warfare that eventually spurred war in the wrong direction has however left a lot to ponder. For all these years since the two sides went nuclear missiles were a huge no-no for their inherent risk of escalation and erroneous assumption of the possible payload. During the Cold War, missiles on either side were kept on the ready in silos as weapons of first choice if a nuclear attack 'seemed' imminent. That brought about the concept of 'Star Wars' in the Reagan era which subsequently was shelved as the Cold War petered out. But then came the era of Rockets and Missiles, and Domes meant to protect from them. The war in the Middle East turned them into a weapon of choice because the weaker side did not possess or could not match the capacity of conventional warfare with the adversary. These were thus anger weapons meant to disrupt and deter than destroy. It helped that those firing were a non-nuclear entity and hence the risk involved in using these weapons between nuclear nations was non-existent. Similarly, Iran too was a relatively weaker force vis a vis Israel when it had to respond with missiles against Israel's unprovoked attacks. South Asia has learnt a wrong lesson from the recent spread of missile warfare without realising its determining construct. We need to go back to the playbook of the Cold War era if we wish to remain hostile as two nuclear nations. How we escaped mutually assured destruction in the four-day war is a miracle. Proliferation of missiles, nuclear or others, enjoins another imperative – defence against them. This is where nations can go broke, even the US and Russia. They were smart, instead beginning a process of Arms Limitations and over time engaging the other in trade ties. Currently these may be in a hiccup but the interdependent nature of the world which largely now is woven into a labyrinth of supply chains makes it incumbent for adversaries to learn to coexist. Both the US and Russia have thus avoided falling into the trap of Domes for protection. Only lately Trump has floated his grand scheme of a Gold Dome, whatever that means. Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Iran and Israel have learnt to live under the threat of an odd missile or rocket or a UAV attack with limited and confined effect. That though doesn't take away the need for a detailed, integrated, networked and centrally controlled air defence system using assets both in the air and on the ground woven into a synchronous automation – a 'system of systems' for defence against all threats using air as the medium of attack. Defence, just as offence, is part of warfare and cannot be neglected. Offence incurs a cost on the enemy, defence saves from enemy's offence and its cost. A huge amount of jargon is bandied about in modern warfare which has roots in systems integration enabled by revolution in instant and coded communication of data. This is not new. What began in the 1980s and refined in the early 2000s has been enabled over the decades with advances in IT and data fusion. Huge steps in capability induction and datalinks have brought about a revolution in force application. Doctrine is in essence the definition of mindset that details employment preferences. This is followed by acquisition plans to fill gaps and training cycles to perfect doctrinal employment till these turn into set-piece events. That is the epitome of perfection. It all must, though, begin with a thought and a single-minded focus to make it happen. It explains how excellence is achieved. Multi-domain, parallel operations will exact another requirement and structure. As AI refines and becomes widely integrated it will become an essential partner to a warfighting commander. That is the next level of man and machine fusion into a single decision-making entity. As multiple domains become active simultaneously a human mind will be saturated to the point of paralysis. That is when the machine will come handy. It shall be a struggle to keep out some fields of play from machine's domain. Where though a line will be drawn to keep Armageddon out will be the next big test for humanity. Real multi-domain will exact real painstaking price off human ingenuity. The race is on either to go under or remain collaboratively afloat in the manner of the USA and Russia.


Korea Herald
28-02-2025
- Politics
- Korea Herald
Azerbaijan commemorates Khojaly massacre
The Azerbaijani Embassy in Seoul marked the 32nd anniversary of the Khojaly massacre, hosting a symposium on Wednesday. Remembering the victims, the embassy reiterated that massacre was carried out by Armenian forces, killing 613 Azerbaijani civilians, including 106 women and 63 children, in the tragic event of 1992. Azerbaijan views the attack as a deliberate act of genocide, referencing the 1948 UN Convention on Genocide. The massacre occurred during the 1990s Azerbaijan-Armenia war, with Armenia disputing the death toll and blaming Azeri soldiers and poor civilian evacuation. "Commemorating the innocent victims of this genocide is a moral duty," stressed Azerbaijani Ambassador to Korea Ramin Hasanov in his remarks at the symposium. "Unfortunately, we had to wait more than 30 years for justice to prevail for the tragedies and crimes committed against our people," he said. Meanwhile, the ambassador urged Korea to step up cooperation with Korean expertise in the Garabagh and East Zangezur regions of Azerbaijan, which have been declared 'green zones.' "Infrastructure and all activities over there will be exclusively facilitated only with green energy. Numerous smart villages, smart cities, wind energy parks, and solar energy systems are currently under construction," stressed the ambassador. Azerbaijan declared 2024 as the Year of Solidarity for a Green World and hosted COP29, attended by 80 heads of state and government, affirming its strong commitment to global climate action. "These developments have created momentum for Azerbaijan and Korea to combine their willingness and strengths towards close cooperation in the said fields, both in a bilateral format and within multilateral institutions," he said. "Amid the ongoing geopolitical challenges and conflicts in the world, Azerbaijan and Korea, as loyal supporters of international law and advocates for international commitments, could closely cooperate and coordinate their endeavors in terms of regional and global affairs." "Korea, in its capacity as a nonpermanent member of the UN Security Council, which will last till the end of this year, can count on my country's cooperation in its efforts to this end," he added. The event was attended by over 100 guests, including members of the diplomatic corps, NGOs, Azerbaijani community members in Korea, and media representatives.