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Pashinyan says Azerbaijan may plan 'full-scale war' against Armenia, Baku denies

by Martin Fornusek February 15, 2024 10:30 PM 2 min read
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan gives an interview in Yerevan on July 21, 2023. (Karen Minasyan / AFP via Getty Images)
This audio is created with AI assistance

Azerbaijan may be planning a "full-scale war" against Armenia, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan claimed on Feb. 15, as tensions between the two countries remain high, AFP reported.

In a lighting offensive last September, Baku seized Nagorno-Karabakh, until then a de jure Azerbaijani territory controlled by self-proclaimed Armenian authorities. The brief war has driven out over 100,000 ethnic Armenians from the region.

Earlier this week, a border skirmish killed four Armenian soldiers, Yerevan said. Both sides have blamed one another for initiating the incident.

Pashinyan warned that after it had captured Karabakh, Azerbaijan plans to expand hostilities also against Armenia itself.

"Our analysis shows... that Azerbaijan wants to launch military action in some parts of the border with the prospect of turning military escalation into a full-scale war against Armenia," Pashinyan said during a government meeting.

"This intention can be read in all statements and actions of Azerbaijan."

Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry said that Pashinyan's warnings were "groundless" and accused the Armenian prime minister of manipulation.

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Yerevan fears that Azerbaijan may try to create a land bridge to Nakhchivan, an Azerbaijani exclave lodged between Armenia, Turkey, and Iran.

Despite some positive signals last December, the two countries have so far failed to finalize a peace agreement and the demarcation of their heavily militarized border.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev recently said that peace can only be achieved if Armenia changes its constitution and other documents that would "put an end to territorial claims against Azerbaijan."

Baku claims that Armenia's Constitution indirectly refers to a 1989 declaration on Karabakh's reunification with Armenia.

"We have no territorial claims to Armenia. And they should give up their claims. Talking to us in the language of blackmail will cost them dearly," Aliyev said.

Pashinyan said that Armenia recognizes the territorial integrity of all neighboring countries but rejected any changes to the country's internal legal system.

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On Sept. 19, just under three years after the end of the last major war between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the mountainous region of Nagorno-Karabakh, Baku moved decisively to finish what it started in 2020. Shortly after the announcement of the launching of “anti-terrorist” measures by the Azerba…

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