Armenia Accuses Turkey Of Raising Tensions In Artsakh After Ankara Blamed Yerevan For Latest Clashes -
Armenia Accuses Turkey Of Raising Tensions In Artsakh After Ankara Blamed Yerevan For Latest Clashes.
Armenia accused Turkey of trying to heighten tensions in the Republic of Artsakh on Monday after Ankara blamed Yerevan for the latest deadly skirmishes on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, per Azatutyun.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry decried “yet another manifestation of Armenia’s aggressive nationalism” in a statement issued late on Sunday hours after the outbreak of heavy fighting there. It accused Armenia of continuing to occupy Azerbaijani territory and hampering the resolution of the Artsakh conflict.
“Turkey will continue, with all its capacity, to stand by Azerbaijan in its struggle to protect its territorial integrity,” added the statement added.
The Armenian Foreign Ministry dismissed these “utterly false and misleading” claims and charged that the Turkish government is trying to “instigate instability in our region.”
“This provocative attitude by Turkey and its groundless accusations against Armenia attest to the fact that this country has been acting not as a member of the OSCE Minsk Group but as a party involved in the Artsakh conflict,” read a ministry statement. “This fact makes it even more impossible for Turkey to play any role in issues related to the Artsakh conflict within international and particularly the OSCE framework.”
Successive Turkish governments have lent Azerbaijan full and unconditional support throughout the Artsakh conflict. They have made the establishment of diplomatic relations with Armenia conditional on a Artsakh settlement acceptable to Baku.
Armenia has always rejected this precondition. It has forged close military ties with Russia to counter what many Armenians see as a serious security threat from Turkey. From Yerevan’s perspective, the presence of thousands of Russian troops in Armenia precludes Turkey’s direct military intervention on Azerbaijan’s side.
Incidentally, Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan spoke by phone on Monday. Their press offices did not list the Artsakh dispute among the issues discussed by the two leaders.
Bu haber zartonkmedia kaynağından gelmektedir.
Haber metninde yer alan görüşler haber kaynağı (zartonkmedia) ve yazarına ait olup,
bolsohays.com sitesi haber hakkında herhangi bir görüş üstlenmemektedir.
Opinions expressed are those of the author(s)-(zartonkmedia). They do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of bolsohays.com