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Second Nagorno-Karabakh War

Second Nagorno-Karabakh War
Part of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

  Areas captured by Azerbaijan during the war
  Areas ceded to Azerbaijan under the ceasefire agreement
  Areas in Nagorno-Karabakh proper remaining under the control of Artsakh
  Lachin corridor and Dadivank monastery, patrolled by Russian peacekeepers
For a more detailed map, see the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict detailed map
Date27 September 2020 (2020-09-27) – 10 November 2020 (2020-11-10)
(1 month and 2 weeks)[30]
Location
Result

Azerbaijani victory[31][32]

Territorial
changes

During the conflict:

Post-ceasefire:

  • Azerbaijan retains control of territories captured during the war
  • All Armenian-occupied territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh ceded back to Azerbaijan by 1 December 2020[35]
  • All economic and transport connections in the region to be unblocked, including transport connections between Nakhchivan and the rest of Azerbaijan
Belligerents

 Azerbaijan

 Turkey (alleged by Armenia)[9][10][11]



 Artsakh
 Armenia


Commanders and leaders
Units involved
Strength

Equipment:
  • Unknown regular military

Equipment:
Casualties and losses

Per Azerbaijan:

  • 2,906 servicemen killed[d]
  • 6 servicemen missing[59]
  • 11,110 servicemen wounded[75]
  • 14 servicemen captured[76]

Per SOHR:

  • 541 Syrian mercenaries killed[60]
  • 3+ Syrian mercenaries captured[77]

See Casualties for details

Per Armenia/Artsakh:

  • 3,825 servicemen killed[78]
  • 187 servicemen missing[79]
  • ~11,000 servicemen wounded and sick[80]
  • 60+ servicemen captured[81]

See Casualties and Prisoners of war for details
  • 100 Azerbaijani[82] and 85 Armenian civilians killed[e]
  • 21 Armenian civilians missing[79]
  • 416 Azerbaijani[82] and 165 Armenian civilians injured[83][84]
  • 3 Azerbaijani[85] and 40 Armenian civilians captured[86]
  • 1 Russian Mi-24 shot down, 2 crew members killed, 1 injured[87]
  • 1 Russian civilian killed[88]
  • 2 French[89] and 3 Russian journalists injured[90]
  • 1 Iranian civilian injured by stray fire[91]
  • 40,000 Azerbaijanis[92] and 100,000 Armenians displaced[93][94][95]

The Second Nagorno-Karabakh War was an armed conflict in 2020 that took place in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding territories. It was a major escalation of an unresolved conflict over the region, involving Azerbaijan, Armenia and the self-declared Armenian breakaway state of Artsakh.[f] The war lasted for more than a month and resulted in Azerbaijani victory, with Armenia ceding the territories it had occupied in 1994 surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh. The defeat ignited anti-government protests in Armenia. Post-war skirmishes continued in the region, including substantial clashes in 2022.

Fighting began on the morning of 27 September, with an Azerbaijani offensive[96][97] along the line of contact established in the aftermath of the First Nagorno-Karabakh War (1988–1994). Clashes were particularly intense in the less mountainous districts of southern Nagorno-Karabakh.[98] Turkey provided military support to Azerbaijan, although the extent of this support has been disputed.[96][99]

The war was marked by the deployment of drones, sensors, long-range heavy artillery[100] and missile strikes, as well as by state propaganda and the use of official social media accounts in online information warfare.[101] In particular, Azerbaijan's widespread use of drones was seen as crucial in determining the conflict's outcome.[102] Numerous countries and the United Nations strongly condemned the fighting and called on both sides to de-escalate tensions and resume meaningful negotiations.[103] Three ceasefires brokered by Russia, France, and the United States failed to stop the conflict.[104]

Following the capture of Shusha, the second-largest city in Nagorno-Karabakh, a ceasefire agreement was signed, ending all hostilities in the area from 10 November 2020.[105][106][107] Under the agreement, the warring sides kept control of the areas they held within Nagorno-Karabakh at the time of the ceasefire, Armenia returned the surrounding territories it had occupied since 1994 to Azerbaijan, and Azerbaijan was guaranteed transport communication to its exclave Nakhchivan, bordering Turkey and Iran.[108] Approximately 2,000 Russian soldiers have been deployed as peacekeeping forces along the Lachin corridor connecting Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, with a mandate of at least five years.[30] Following the end of the war, an unconfirmed number of Armenian prisoners of war were captive in Azerbaijan, with reports of mistreatment and charges filed against them,[109][110][111][112] leading to a case at the International Court of Justice.[113]

Naming

The war has been referred to as the "Second Nagorno-Karabakh War",[114][115] and has also been called the "44-Day War" in both Armenia and Azerbaijan.[116][117]

In Armenia and Artsakh, it has been called the "Second Artsakh War" (Armenian: Արցախյան երկրորդ պատերազմ, romanizedArts'akhyan yerkrord paterazm),[118][119] "Patriotic War"[120] and the "Fight for Survival" (Armenian: Գոյամարտ, romanizedGoyamart).[121]

In Azerbaijan, it has been called the "Second Karabakh War" (Azerbaijani: İkinci Qarabağ müharibəsi)[122] and "Patriotic War".[123][124] The Azerbaijani government referred to it as an "operation for peace enforcement"[125] and "counter-offensive operation".[126] It later announced it had initiated military operations under the code-name "Operation Iron Fist" (Azerbaijani: Dəmir Yumruq əməliyyatı).[127]

Background

The territorial ownership of Nagorno-Karabakh is fiercely contested between Armenians and Azerbaijanis. The current conflict has its roots in events following World War I and today the region is de jure part of Azerbaijan, although large parts are de facto held by the internationally unrecognised Republic of Artsakh, which is supported by Armenia.[128]

Soviet era

During the Soviet era, the predominantly Armenian-populated region was governed as an autonomous oblast within the Azerbaijan SSR.[129] As the Soviet Union began to disintegrate during the late 1980s the question of Nagorno-Karabakh's status re-emerged, and on 20 February 1988 the parliament of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast passed a resolution requesting transfer of the oblast from the Azerbaijan SSR to the Armenian SSR. Azerbaijan rejected the request several times,[130] and ethnic violence began shortly thereafter with a series of pogroms between 1988 and 1990 against Armenians in Sumgait, Ganja and Baku,[131][132][133][134] and against Azerbaijanis in Gugark and Stepanakert.[135][136][137][138] Following the revocation of Nagorno-Karabakh's autonomous status, an independence referendum was held in the region on 10 December 1991. The referendum was boycotted by the Azerbaijani population, which then constituted around 22.8% of the region's population; 99.8% of participants voted in favour. In early 1992, following the Soviet Union's collapse, the region descended into outright war.[130][dead link]

First Nagorno-Karabakh War

 
Ethnic groups of the region in 1995, following the end of the First Nagorno-Karabakh War and the displacement of the region's Azerbaijani and ethnic Armenian population. (See entire map)

The First Nagorno-Karabakh War resulted in the displacement of approximately 725,000 Azerbaijanis and 300,000–500,000 Armenians from both Azerbaijan and Armenia.[139] The 1994 Bishkek Protocol brought the fighting to an end and resulted in significant Armenian territorial gains: in addition to controlling most of Nagorno-Karabakh, the Republic of Artsakh also occupied the surrounding Azerbaijani-populated districts of Agdam, Jabrayil, Fuzuli, Kalbajar, Qubadli, Lachin and Zangilan.[140] The terms of the Bishkek agreement produced a frozen conflict,[141] and long-standing international mediation attempts to create a peace process were initiated by the OSCE Minsk Group in 1994, with the interrupted Madrid Principles being the most recent iteration prior to the 2020 war.[142][143] The United Nations Security Council adopted four resolutions in 1993 calling for the withdrawal of "occupying forces" from the territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh,[144] and in 2008 the General Assembly adopted a resolution demanding the immediate withdrawal of Armenian occupying forces,[145] although the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, Russia, France and USA, voted against it.[146]

Frozen conflict

For three decades multiple violations of the ceasefire occurred, the most serious being the four-day 2016 Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.[147] Surveys indicated that the inhabitants of Nagorno-Karabakh did not want to be part of Azerbaijan[148] and in 2020 the Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan announced plans to make Shusha, a city of historical and cultural significance to both Armenians and Azerbaijanis,[131] Artsakh's new capital. In August of the same year the government of Artsakh moved the country's parliament to Shusha, escalating tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan.[149] Further skirmishes occurred on the border between the two countries in July 2020.[147] Thousands of Azerbaijanis rallied for war against Armenia in response, and Turkey voiced its firm support for Azerbaijan.[150] On 29 July 2020, Azerbaijan conducted a series of military exercises that lasted from 29 July to 10 August 2020,[151] followed by further exercises in early September with the involvement of Turkey.[152] Prior to the resumption of hostilities, allegations emerged that Turkey had facilitated the transfer of hundreds of Syrian National Army members from the Hamza Division to Azerbaijan.[153] Baku denied the involvement of foreign fighters.[154]

Course of the war

Overview

 
Approximate frontlines at the time of the ceasefire, with Azerbaijan's territorial gains during the war in red, the Lachin corridor under Russian peacekeepers in blue, and areas ceded by Armenia to Azerbaijan hashed.

The conflict was characterised by the widespread use of combat drones, particularly by Azerbaijan,[155] as well as heavy artillery barrages, rocket attacks and trench warfare.[156] Throughout the campaign, Azerbaijan relied heavily on drone strikes against Armenian/Artsakh forces, inflicting heavy losses upon Armenian tanks, artillery, air defence systems and military personnel, although some Azerbaijani drones were shot down.[157][158] It also featured the deployment of cluster munitions, which are banned by the majority of the international community but not by Armenia or Azerbaijan.[159] Both Armenia[160] and Azerbaijan[161] used cluster munitions against civilian areas outside of the conflict zone.[162] A series of missile attacks on Ganja, Azerbaijan inflicted mass civilian casualties, as did artillery strikes on Stepanakert, Artsakh's capital.[163] Much of Stepanakert's population fled during the course of the fighting.[164] The conflict was accompanied by coordinated attempts to spread misleading content and disinformation via social media and the internet.[165]

The conflict began with an Azerbaijani ground offensive that included armoured formations, supported by artillery and drones, including loitering munitions. Armenian and Artsakh troops were forced back from their first line of defence in Artsakh's southeast and northern regions, but inflicted significant losses on Azerbaijani armoured formations with anti-tank guided missiles and artillery, destroying dozens of vehicles. Azerbaijan made heavy use of drones in strikes against Armenian air defences, taking out 13 short-range surface-to-air missile systems. Azerbaijani forces used drones to systematically isolate and destroy Armenian/Artsakh positions. Reconnaissance drones would locate a military position on the front lines and the placement of reserve forces, after which the position would be shelled along with roads and bridges that could potentially be used by the reserves to reach the position. After the Armenian/Artsakh position had been extensively shelled and cut off from reinforcement, the Azerbaijanis would move in superior forces to overwhelm it. This tactic was repeatedly used to gradually overrun Armenian and Artsakh positions.[166] Azerbaijani troops managed to make limited gains in the south in the first three days of the conflict. For the next three days, both sides largely exchanged fire from fixed positions. In the north, Armenian/Artsakh forces counterattacked, managing to retake some ground. Their largest counterattack took place on the fourth day, but incurred heavy losses when their armour and artillery units were exposed to Azerbaijani attack drones, loitering munitions, and reconnaissance drones spotting for Azerbaijani artillery as they manoeuvred in the open.[46]

Day-by-day animation of the war. Red: Artsakh; blue: captured by the Azerbaijani army; dotted blue: regions in which Azerbaijani special forces were active.

Azerbaijan targeted infrastructure throughout Artsakh starting on the first day of the war, including the use of rocket artillery and cluster munitions against Stepanakert, the capital of Artsakh, and a missile strike against a bridge in the Lachin Corridor linking Armenia with Artsakh. On the 6th day of the war, Armenia/Artsakh targeted Ganja for the first of four times with ballistic missiles, nominally targeting the military portion of Ganja International Airport but instead hitting residential areas. On the morning of the seventh day, Azerbaijan launched a major offensive. The Azerbaijani Army's First, Second, and Third Army Corps, reinforced by reservists from the Fourth Army Corps, began an advance in the north, making some territorial gains, but the Azerbaijani advance stalled.[46]

Most of the fighting subsequently shifted to the south, in terrain that is relatively flat and underpopulated as compared to the mountainous north. Azerbaijani forces launched offensives toward Jabrayil and Füzuli, managing to break through the multi-layered Armenian/Artsakh defensive lines and recapture a stretch of territory held by Armenian troops as a buffer zone, but the fighting subsequently stalled.[46]

 
Map of the war showing Azerbaijan's day-to-day advances

After the shelling of Martuni,[167] Artsakh authorities began mobilising civilians.[168] Just before 04:00 (00:00 UTC) on 10 October 2020, Russia reported that both Armenia and Azerbaijan had agreed on a humanitarian ceasefire after ten hours of talks in Moscow (the Moscow Statement) and announced that both would enter "substantive" talks.[citation needed] After the declared ceasefire, the President of Artsakh admitted Azerbaijan had been able to achieve some success, moving the front deep into Artsakh territory;[169] the Armenian Prime Minister announced that Armenian forces had conducted a "partial retreat".[170]

The ceasefire quickly broke down and the Azerbaijani advance continued. Within days Azerbaijan announced the capture of dozens of villages on the southern front.[171] A second ceasefire attempt midnight 17 October 2020 was also ignored.[172] Azerbaijan announced the capture of Jabrayil on 9 October 2020 and Füzuli on 17 October 2020. Azerbaijani troops also captured the Khoda Afarin Dam and Khodaafarin Bridges. Azerbaijan announced that the border area with Iran was fully secured with the capture of Agbend on 22 October 2020.[173] Azerbaijani forces then turned northwest, advancing towards the Lachin corridor, the sole highway between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, putting it within artillery range. According to Artsakh, a counterattack repelled forward elements of the Azerbaijani force and pushed them back. Armenian/Artsakh resistance had managed to halt the Azerbaijani advance to within 25 kilometres of the Lachin corridor by 26 October 2020. Artsakh troops who had retreated into the mountains and forests began launching small-unit attacks against exposed Azerbaijani infantry and armour, and Armenian forces launched a counteroffensive near the far southwestern border between Armenia and Azerbaijan.[174] On 26 October 2020, a US-brokered ceasefire came into effect, but fighting resumed within minutes.[175][176] Three days later, the Artsakh authorities stated that the Azerbaijani forces were 5 km (3.1 mi) from Shusha.[177] On 8 November 2020, Azerbaijani forces seized Shusha,[178] the second-largest city in Artsakh before the war, located 15 kilometres from Stepanakert, the republic's capital.[179]

Although the amount of territory contested was relatively restricted, the conflict impacted the wider region, in part due to the type of munitions deployed. Shells and rockets landed in East Azerbaijan Province, Iran, although no damage was reported,[180][181] and Iran reported that several unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) had been downed or had crashed within its territory.[182][183][184][185] Georgia stated that two UAVs had crashed in its Kakheti Province.[186]

Ceasefire agreement

 
Map of the ceasefire agreement
  Azerbaijan outside of the conflict zone
  Armenia
  Areas captured by Azerbaijan during the war, to stay under its control
  Agdam District: evacuated by Armenia by 20 November[187][188]
  Kalbajar District: evacuated by Armenia by 25 November[189]
  Lachin District: evacuated by Armenia by 1 December[190]
  Part of Nagorno-Karabakh remaining under the control of Artsakh
  Lachin corridor, monitored by Russian peacekeepers
  Access roads into Nagorno-Karabakh
   All economic and transport connections in the region to be unblocked, including transport connections between Nakhchivan and rest of Azerbaijan (arrow's hypothetical location chosen by a Wikipedia user, and not defined by the statement itself)
  Line of contact before the 2020 conflict.
  Other areas claimed by Artsakh

On 9 November 2020, in the aftermath of the capture of Shusha, a ceasefire agreement was signed by the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, the Prime Minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan, and the President of Russia, Vladimir Putin, ending all hostilities in the zone of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict from 10 November 2020, 00:00 Moscow time.[105][106][107] The President of Artsakh, Arayik Harutyunyan, also agreed to end the hostilities.[191]

Under the terms of the deal, both belligerent parties were to exchange prisoners of war and the bodies of the fallen. Furthermore, Armenian forces were to withdraw from Armenian-occupied territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh by 1 December 2020, while a peacekeeping force, provided by the Russian Ground Forces and led by Lieutenant General Rustam Muradov,[192] of just under 2,000 soldiers would be deployed for a minimum of five years along the line of contact and the Lachin corridor linking Armenia and the Nagorno-Karabakh region. Additionally, Armenia undertook to "guarantee safety" of transport communication between Azerbaijan's Nakhchivan exclave and mainland Azerbaijan in both directions, while Russia's border troops (under the Federal Security Service) were to "exercise control over the transport communication".[193][194][195]

On 15 December 2020, after several weeks of cease fire, the sides finally exchanged prisoners of war. 44 Armenian and 12 Azeri prisoners were exchanged.[196] It is unclear whether more prisoners remain in captivity on either side.

Non-military actions taken by Armenia and Azerbaijan

Since the beginning of the conflict, both Armenia and Azerbaijan declared martial law, limiting the freedom of speech. Meanwhile, a new law came into effect since October 2020 in Armenia, which prohibits negative coverage of the situation at the front.[197] Restrictions have been reported on the work of international journalists in Azerbaijan, with no corresponding restrictions reported in Nagorno-Karabakh.[198]

Armenia

 
A pro-military billboard in Republic Square, Yerevan, on 7 October 2020.

On 28 September 2020, Armenia banned men aged over 18 listed in the mobilisation reserve from leaving the country.[199] The next day, it postponed the trial of former President Robert Kocharyan and other former officials charged in the 2008 post-election unrest case, owing to one of the defendants, the former Defence Minister of Armenia, Seyran Ohanyan, going to Artsakh during the conflict.[200]

On 1 October 2020, the Armenian National Security Service (NSS) stated that it had arrested and charged a former high-ranking Armenian military official with treason on suspicion of spying for Azerbaijan.[201] Three days later, the NSS stated that it had arrested several foreign citizens on suspicion of spying.[202] Protesting Israeli arms sales to Azerbaijan, Armenia has recalled its ambassador to Israel.[203]

On 8 October 2020, the Armenian President, Armen Sarkissian, dismissed the director of the NSS.[204] Subsequently, the Armenian government toughened the martial law and prohibited criticising state bodies and "propaganda aimed at disruption of the defense capacity of the country".[205] On the same day, the Armenian MoD cancelled a Novaya Gazeta correspondent's journalistic accreditation, officially for entering Nagorno-Karabakh without accreditation.[206] On 9 October 2020, Armenia tightened its security legislation.[205] On 21 October 2020, the Armenian Cabinet of Ministers temporarily banned the import of Turkish goods, the decision will come into force on 31 December 2020.[207] The following day, the Armenian parliament passed a law to write off the debts of the Armenian servicemen wounded during the clashes and the debts of the families of those killed.[208]

On 27 October 2020, the Armenian president Armen Sarkissian dismissed the head of the counterintelligence department of the National Security Service, Major General Hovhannes Karumyan and the chief of staff of the border troops of the National Security Service Gagik Tevosyan.[209] On 8 November 2020, Sarkissian yet again dismissed the interim head of the National Security Service.[210]

As of 8 November 2020, one Armenian activist was fined by the police for his anti-war post.[211]

Azerbaijan

 
Azerbaijani flag in Jafar Jabbarly Square near the 28 May station in Baku on 10 October 2020.

On 27 September 2020, Azerbaijani authorities restricted internet access shortly after the clashes began,[212] stating it was "in order to prevent large-scale Armenian provocations." The government made a noticeable push to use Twitter, which was the only unblocked platform in the country. Despite the restrictions, some Azerbaijanis still used VPNs to bypass them.[213] The National Assembly of Azerbaijan declared a curfew in Baku, Ganja, Goygol, Yevlakh and a number of districts from midnight on 28 September 2020,[214][215] under the Interior Minister, Vilayet Eyvazov.[216] Azerbaijan Airlines announced that all airports in Azerbaijan would be closed to regular passenger flights until 30 September 2020.[217] The Military Prosecutor's Offices of Fuzuli, Tartar, Karabakh and Ganja began criminal investigations of war and other crimes.[218]

Also on 28 September 2020, the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, issued a decree authorising a partial mobilisation in Azerbaijan.[219] On 8 October 2020, Azerbaijan recalled its ambassador to Greece for consultations, following allegations of Armenians from Greece arriving in Nagorno-Karabakh to fight against Azerbaijan.[220] Three days later, the Azerbaijani State Security Service (SSS) warned against a potential Armenian-backed terror attack.[221]

On 17 October 2020, the Azerbaijani MoFA stated that member of the Russian State Duma from the ruling United Russia, Vitaly Milonov, was declared persona non grata in Azerbaijan for visiting Nagorno-Karabakh without permission from the Azerbaijani government.[222] On 24 October 2020, by recommendation of the Central Bank of Azerbaijan, the member banks of the Azerbaijani Banks' Association unanimously adopted a decision to write off the debts of the military servicemen and civilians who died during the conflict.[223]

On 29 October 2020, the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, issued a decree on the formation of temporary commandant's offices in the areas that the Azerbaijani forces seized control of during the conflict. According to the decree, the commandants will be appointed by the Ministry of Internal Affairs, but they will have to coordinate with other executive bodies of the government, including Ministry of Defense, the State Border Service, the State Security Service, and ANAMA.[224][225]

By 31 October 2020, after gaining control of the territories on the border with Iran, Azerbaijan had established control over four more border posts.[226]

By 4 November 2020, six peace activists from Azerbaijan have been called to questioning by the State Security Service, due to their anti-war activism in Azerbaijan.[227][228][229][230][231]

On 12 December, a decree by President Aliyev lifted the curfew that had been imposed in September.[232]

Casualties

Casualties have been high,[233] officially in the low thousands. According to official figures released by the belligerents, Armenia lost 3,825 troops killed[78] and 187 missing,[79] while Azerbaijan lost 2,906 troops killed, with six missing in action.[59] During the conflict, it was noted that the sides downplayed the number of their own casualties and exaggerated the numbers of enemy casualties and injuries.[234]

Civilians

 
The wall with images of fallen Armenian soldiers. According to Artsakhian President, mainly 18–20 year old soldiers fought in hostilities.[235]

The Armenian authorities stated that 85 Armenian civilians were killed during the war,[e] while another 21 were missing.[79] According to Azerbaijani sources, the Armenian military has targeted densely populated areas containing civilian structures.[236] As of 9 November 2020, the Prosecutor General's Office of the Republic of Azerbaijan stated that during the war, as a result of reported shelling by Armenian artillery and rocketing, 100 people had been killed, while 416 people had been wounded.[82] Also, during the post-war clashes, the Azerbaijani authorities stated that an Azercell employee was seriously injured during the installation of communication facilities and transmission equipment near Hadrut.[237]

As of 23 October 2020, the Armenian authorities has stated that the conflict had displaced more than half of Nagorno-Karabakh's population or approximately 90,000 people.[94] The International Rescue Committee has also claimed that more than half of the population of Nagorno-Karabakh has been displaced by the conflict.[238] As of 2 November 2020, the Azerbaijani authorities has stated that the conflict had displaced approximately 40,000 people in Azerbaijan.[92]

Seven journalists have been injured.[158][239] On 1 October 2020, two French journalists from Le Monde covering the clashes in Khojavend were injured by Azerbaijani shellfire.[240] A week later, three Russian journalists reporting in Shusha were seriously injured by an Azerbaijani attack.[241][242] On 19 October 2020, according to Azerbaijani sources, an Azerbaijani AzTV journalist received shrapnel wounds from Armenian shellfire in Aghdam District.[239]

Military

 
Wounded Azerbaijani servicemen attending the victory parade on 10 December.
 
An Armenian 2S1 Gvozdika captured as a war trophy by the Azerbaijani forces, displayed on 10 December during the victory parade.

Armenian authorities reported the deaths of 3,825 servicemen during the war, while the Azerbaijani authorities stated that more than 5,000 Armenian servicemen were killed, and several times more were wounded as of 28 October 2020.[243] After the war, the former director of the Armenian National Security Service, Artur Vanetsyan, had also stated that some 5,000 Armenians were killed during the war.[244] Also, the Armenian authorities had stated that about 60 Armenian servicemen were captured by Azerbaijan as prisoners of war.[81] The former Head of the Military Control Service of the Armenian MoD, Movses Hakobyan, stated that already on the fifth day of war there were 1,500 deserters from Armenian armed forces, who were kept in Karabakh and not allowed to return to Armenia in order to prevent panic. The press secretary of Armenian prime minister called the accusations absurd and asked the law enforcement agencies to deal with them.[245] Former military commissar of Armenia major-general Levon Stepanyan stated that the number of deserters in Armenian army was over 10,000, and it is not possible to prosecute such a large number of military personnel.[246] During the post-war clashes, the Armenian government stated that 60 servicemen went missing,[247] including several dozen that were captured.[248] and On 27 October 2020, Artsakh authorities stated that its defence minister Jalal Harutyunyan was wounded in action.[249] However, unofficial Azerbaijani military sources alleged that he was killed and released footage apparently showing the assassination from a drone camera.[250]

During the conflict, the government of Azerbaijan did not reveal the number of its military casualties.[251] On 11 January, Azerbaijan stated that 2,853 of its soldiers had been killed during the war, while another 50 went missing.[59] Also, Azerbaijani authorities stated that 11 more Azerbaijani servicemen were killed during the post-war clashes or landmine explosions.[252][253][254] On 23 October 2020, President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, confirmed that Shukur Hamidov who was made National Hero of Azerbaijan in 2016, was killed during the operations in Qubadli District.[255] This was the first military casualty officially confirmed by the government. However, Armenian and Artsakh authorities have claimed 7,630 Azerbaijani soldiers and Syrian mercenaries were killed.[256][257]

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights documented the death of at least 541 Syrian fighters or mercenaries fighting for Azerbaijan.[60] On 14 November 2020, the Observatory reported the death of a commander of the Syrian National Army's Hamza Division.[258]

Infrastructure damage

 
Azerbaijani authorities had stated that about four thousand civilian objects were damaged in the territory of the Tartar District as a result of the bombardment of the district.[262][263]

Civilian areas, including major cities, have been hit, including Azerbaijan's second-largest city, Ganja, and the region's capital, Stepanakert, with many buildings and homes destroyed.[264][265] The Ghazanchetsots Cathedral has also been damaged.[266] Several outlets reported increased cases of COVID-19 in Nagorno-Karabakh, particularly the city of Stepanakert, where the population was forced to live in overcrowded bunkers, due to Azerbaijan artillery and drone strikes conflict.[267][268] There were also reported difficulties in testing and contact tracing during the conflict.[267][268]

The Ghazanchetsots Cathedral in Shusha became damaged as a result of shelling. On 19 October 2020, a strong fire broke out in a cotton plant in Azad Qaraqoyunlu, Tartar District, as a result of the Armenian artillery shelling, with several large hangars of the plant becoming completely burned down.[269] An Armenian-backed Nagorno-Karabakh human rights ombudsman report noted 5,800 private properties and 520 private vehicles destroyed, with damage to 960 items of civilian infrastructure, and industrial and public and objects.[270] On 16 November 2020, the Prosecutor General's Office of the Republic of Azerbaijan reported 3,410 private houses, 512 civilian facilities, and 120 multi-storey residential buildings being damaged throughout the war.[82]

Equipment losses

By 7 October 2020, Azerbaijan reported to have destroyed about 250 tanks and other armoured vehicles; 150 other military vehicles; 11 command and command-observation posts; 270 artillery units and MLRSs, including a BM-27 Uragan; 60 Armenian anti-aircraft systems, including 4 S-300 and 25 9K33 Osas; 18 UAVs and 8 arms depots.[243][271][272][273] destroyed. As of 16 October 2020, the Azerbaijani President stated that the Armenian losses were at US$2 billion.[274] In turn an Azerbaijani helicopter was stated to have been damaged, but its crew had apparently returned it to Azerbaijani-controlled territory without casualties.[275] Later it was reported that on 12 October 2020, Azerbaijan had destroyed one Tochka-U missile launcher. On 14 October 2020, Azerbaijan stated it had further destroyed five T-72 tanks, three BM-21 Grad rocket launchers, one 9K33 Osa missile system, one BMP-2 vehicle, one KS-19 air defence gun, two D-30 howitzers and several Armenian army automobiles.[276] On the same day, Azerbaijan announced the destruction of three R-17 Elbrus tactical ballistic missile launchers that had been targeting Ganja and Mingachevir.[277] BBC reporters confirmed the destruction of at least one tactical ballistic missile launcher in the vicinity of Vardenis, close to the border with Azerbaijan, and posted photo evidence in support of this information.[278] Later American journalist Josh Friedman posted a high quality video of a destroyed Armenian ballistic missile launcher.[279]

Armenian and Artsakh authorities initially reported the downing of four Azerbaijani helicopters and the destruction of ten tanks and IFVs, as well as 15 drones.[280] Later the numbers were revised to 36 tanks and armoured personnel vehicles destroyed, two armoured combat engineering vehicles destroyed and four helicopters and 27 unmanned aerial vehicles downed all within the first day of hostilities.[281] They released footage showing the destruction or damage of five Azerbaijani tanks.[282] Over the course of 2 October, the Artsakh Defence Army said they had destroyed 39 Azerbaijani military vehicles, including a T-90 tank; four SU-25 fighter-bombers; three Mi-24 attack helicopters; and 17 UAVs.[283]

According to Dutch warfare research group Oryx, which documents visually confirmed losses on both sides, Armenia lost 255 tanks (destroyed: 146, damaged: 6, captured: 103), 78 armoured fighting vehicles (destroyed: 25, damaged: 1, captured: 52), and 737 trucks, vehicles and jeeps (destroyed: 331, damaged: 18, captured: 387), while Azerbaijan lost 62 tanks (destroyed: 38, damaged: 16, abandoned: 1, captured: 7, captured but later lost: 1), 23 armoured fighting vehicles (destroyed: 6, damaged: 3, abandoned: 7, captured: 9), 76 trucks, vehicles and jeeps (destroyed: 40, damaged: 22, abandoned: 8, captured: 6), as well 11 old An-2 aircraft, used as unmanned bait in order for Armenia to reveal the location of air defence systems. Oryx only counts destroyed vehicles and equipment of which photo or videographic evidence is available, and therefore, the actual number of equipment destroyed is higher.[284]

Suspected war crimes

UN Secretary-General António Guterres stated that "indiscriminate attacks on populated areas anywhere, including in Stepanakert, Ganja and other localities in and around the immediate Nagorno-Karabakh zone of conflict, were totally unacceptable".[285] Amnesty International stated that both Azerbaijani and Armenian forces committed war crimes during recent fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh, and called on Azerbaijani and Armenian authorities to immediately conduct independent, impartial investigations, identify all those responsible, and bring them to justice.[286][287]

Azerbaijan started an investigation on war crimes by Azerbaijani servicemen in November[288] and as of 14 December, has arrested four of its servicemen.[289]

Armenian

 
The Armenian forces had shelled the town of Shikharkh, damaging apartments and schools.[290] The town was built for the Azerbaijani refugees of the First Nagorno-Karabakh war.[291]

Armenia struck several Azerbaijani cities outside of the conflict zone, most frequently Tartar, Beylagan and Barda.[292][293] Attacks reported by Azerbaijani authorities included an attack on Beylagan on 4 October, killing two civilians and injuring 2 others,[294][295] Goranboy on 8 October killing a civilian,[296] Hadrut on 10 October, seriously injuring a medical worker,[297] Fuzuli on 20 October, resulting in one civilian death and six injuries,[298][299] Tartar on 20 October, resulting in two civilian deaths and one civilian injury[300] and Tartar on 10 November, resulting in one civilian injury.[301] By 9 November, there had been more than 93 civilian deaths and 416 civilian injuries in areas of Azerbaijan outside of the war zone.[184][302]

Human Rights Watch reported that on 27 September, the Armenian forces had launched an artillery attack on Qaşaltı of Goranboy District, killing five members of the Gurbanov family, and damaged several homes. Human Rights Watch examined the severely damaged house and found several munition remnants in the courtyard that were consistent with fragments of large-caliber artillery. It also reported that the Armenian forces struck Hacıməmmədli of Aghdam District on 1 October, in an agricultural area, at around 11:00, killing two civilians. HRW stated that they had found no evident military objectives during their visit to the village. HRW also reported that the Armenian forces had launched an artillery attack on 4 October in Tap Qaraqoyunlu of Goranboy District at about 16:30, wounding a civilian. Then, on 5 October, Human Rights Watch reported that the Armenian forces fired a munition that landed in a field about 500 meters from Babı of Fuzuli District. The Azerbaijani authorities stated that they had identified the munition as a Scud-B ballistic missile and measured the crater as 15 meters in diameter.[290]

Armenian forces heavily shelled the district of Tartar during the war, starting from 28 September. The bombardment caused widespread destruction and many civilian deaths.[303][262] Thousands of people became refugees, making the city of Tartar a ghost town,[304] and fled to neighbouring cities such as Barda.[305][306][307] The Azerbaijani authorities stated that the Armenian forces had fired 15,500 shells on the territory of Tartar District until 29 October, with over 2,000 shells being fired upon Tartar in some days. Official Azerbaijani figures show that over a thousand civilian objects, including schools, hospitals, and government buildings were either damaged or destroyed during the bombardment.[262] Human Rights Watch confirmed many of the targeted attacks on civilians and civilian objects, such as kindergartens and hospitals, by the Armenian forces. It also stated that the Armenian military forces had carried out unlawfully indiscriminate rocket and missile strikes on the Azerbaijani territories, and that such indiscriminate attacks were war crimes.[308] The constant bombardment of the city prompted the Azerbaijani to label Tartar as the Stalingrad of Azerbaijan,[309] and the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, accused Armenia of trying to turn Tartar to the next Aghdam, also referred to as the Hiroshima of the Caucasus by the locals.[310][311] Turkey also condemned the Armenian shelling of a cemetery in Tartar during a funeral ceremony,[312] which foreign journalists at scene and Human Rights Watch confirmed.[313][308] On 29 October, the head of the Tartar District Executive Power, Mustagim Mammadov, stated that during the war, 17 civilians killed, and 61 people injured in Tartar District as a result of the bombardment in Tartar. According to him, in total, about 1,200 people suffered from the bombardment.[262] The Azerbaijani authorities reported two more civilian injuries later on.

 
 
Destruction in Tartar after the Armenian bombardment.
External video
  Azerbaijan: footage shows shelling in city of Ganja on YouTube

Between 4 and 17 October, four separate missile attacks on the city of Ganja killed 32 civilians,[290] including a 13-year-old Russian citizen,[88] and injured 125[314][315][316][317] with women and children among the victims.[317] The attacks were condemned by the European Union,[318] and Azerbaijani authorities accused the Armenian Armed Forces of "committing war crimes through the firing of ballistic missiles at civilian settlements", calling the third attack "an act of genocide".[319][320][321] Armenia denied responsibility for the attacks.[322][317] The Artsakh Defence Army confirmed responsibility for the first attack but denied targeting residential areas, claiming that it had fired at military targets, especially Ganja International Airport.[323][324] Subsequently, both a correspondent reporting from the scene for a Russian media outlet and the airport director denied that the airport had been hit,[325] while a BBC News journalist, Orla Guerin, visited the scene and found no evidence of any military target there.[326]

On 15 October, the Armenian forces shelled a cemetery 400 metres (1,300 ft) north of the city of Tartar during a funeral ceremony, killing 4 civilians and injuring 4 more.[327] This was confirmed by local journalists,[328] Dozhd,[313] and the Human Rights Watch.[308] The Presidential Administration of Azerbaijan also confirmed that the cemetery was shelled in the morning.[329]

On 25 October, a video emerged online of an Armenian teenager in civilian clothing helping soldiers fire artillery on Azerbaijani positions. Azerbaijan subsequently accused Armenia of using child soldiers.[330][331] One day later, the Artsakh ombudsman released a statement claiming that the boy in the video was 16, was not directly engaged in military actions and was working with his father.[332]

The Human Rights Watch reported that on 28 October, at about 17:00, the Armenian forces fired a munition on Tap Qaraqoyunlu of Goranboy District that produced fragmentation and killed a civilian.[290]

The Artsakh Defence Army hit the Azerbaijani town of Barda with missiles twice on 27 and 28 October 2020, resulting in the deaths of 26 civilians and injuring over 83, making it the deadliest attack of the conflict.[333][334][335] The casualties included a 39-year-old Red Crescent volunteer, while two other volunteers were injured.[336] Civilian infrastructure and vehicles were extensively damaged.[337] Armenia denied responsibility,[338] but Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch stated that Armenia had fired, or intentionally supplied Artsakh with, the cluster munitions and Smerch rockets used in the attack.[339][340] Artsakh acknowledged responsibility, but said it was targeting military facilities.[341] Marie Struthers, Amnesty International's Regional Director for Eastern Europe and Central Asia, said that the "firing of cluster munitions into civilian areas is cruel and reckless, and causes untold death, injury and misery".[342] The Azerbaijani ombudsman called the attack a "terrorist act against civilians".[343] The use of cluster munitions was also reported by The New York Times.[344] On 7 November, according to Human Rights Watch, the Armenian forces fired a rocket that struck an agricultural field near the village of Əyricə and killed a 16-year-old boy while he playing with other children. Azerbaijani authorities stated that they had identified the munition as a 9M528 Smerch rocket, which carries a warhead that produces blast and fragmentation effect. HRW reported that the researchers did not observe any military objectives in the area.[290]

On 30 October 2020, Human Rights Watch reported that Armenia or Artsakh forces used cluster munition and stated that Armenia should immediately cease using cluster munitions or supplying them to Nagorno-Karabakh forces.[160]

 
Destruction in Ganja after the Armenian missile attacks on the city.

In mid-November, a video of a wounded Azerbaijani soldier Amin Musayev receiving first aid by Ukrainian journalist Alexander Kharchenko and Armenian soldiers after the ceasefire came into force was spread on social media platforms. Following this, a video was released showing Musayev being abused inside a vehicle. It is reported that he was lying on the ground in the car and asked: "where are we going?" In response, the alleged Armenian soldier said, "If you behave well, go home," and cursed, after which it became clear that the Azerbaijani soldier had been kicked. On 18 November, a representative of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Yerevan said that information about this person was "being investigated." The ICRC's representative in Yerevan, Zara Amatuni, declined to say whether she had any information about Musayev. The Artsakh ombudsman said he had no information about the Azerbaijani soldier, but that if he was injured, he was "probably in hospital in Armenia." The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said in a statement that the issue was being investigated and will be reported to the relevant international organisations. According to the ministry, "the information about the torture of prisoners is first checked for accuracy and brought to the attention of relevant international organizations."[345][346] On 25 November, ICRC's representatives visited Musayev and Karimov in Yerevan.[347] On 5 December, the family of Musayev was informed of his condition through ICRC. According to a reported copy of the letter sent by Musayev, he stated that his condition was well.[345] Musayev was returned to Azerbaijan on 15 December as part of the POW exchange deal.[348] Azerbaijan had officially accused the Armenian side of ill-treating the Azerbaijani POWs.[349] Several Azerbaijani POWs, in interviews with the Azerbaijani media outlets, had stated that they were tortured by their Armenian captors until being transferred back to Azerbaijan.[350][351][352] Dilgam Asgarov, a Russian citizen of Azerbaijani descent, who was detained by the Armenian-allied forces alongside Shahbaz Guliyev, an Azerbaijani citizen, in 2014, during an incident in Kalbajar,[353] in an interview to Virtual Azərbaycan newspaper he gave after being released, also stated that the Armenian captors had tortured the Azerbaijani POWs.[354]

On 10 December, Amnesty International released a report on videos depicting war crimes. In one of the videos, the Armenian soldiers were seen cutting the throat of an Azerbaijani captive. The captive appears to be lying on the ground, whilst gagged and bound when an Armenian soldier approaches him and sticks a knife into his throat. Independent pathological analysis confirmed that the wound sustained led to his death in minutes. Eleven other videos showing inhumane treatment and outrages upon personal dignity of Azerbaijani captives by the Armenian army has come to light. In several videos, Armenian soldiers are seen cutting the ear off a dead Azerbaijani soldier, dragging a dead Azerbaijani soldier across the ground by a rope tied around his feet, and standing on the corpse of a dead Azerbaijani soldier.[286][287]

On 11 December, Human Rights Watch released an extensive report about Armenia's unlawful rocket strikes on Azerbaijani civilian areas. The report investigated 18 separate strikes, which killed 40 civilians and wounded dozens more. During on-site investigations in Azerbaijan in November, Human Rights Watch documented 11 incidents in which Armenian forces used ballistic missiles, unguided artillery rockets, large-calibre artillery projectiles and cluster munitions that hit populated areas in apparently indiscriminate attacks. In at least four other cases, munitions struck civilians or civilian objects in areas where there were no apparent military targets. In addition to causing civilian casualties, the Armenian attacks damaged homes, businesses, schools, and a health clinic, and contributed to mass displacement. It acknowledged the presence of military forces in two cities and two villages attacked by Armenian forces, claiming that Azerbaijan had unnecessarily put civilians at risk, however, it also stated that the presence of military targets did not excuse the use of inherently inaccurate weaponry with a large destructive radius in populated areas by Armenian forces. Human Rights Watch called the Armenian government to conduct transparent investigations into attacks by Armenian forces that violate international humanitarian law, or the laws of war.[290] On 15 December, Human Rights Watch released another report about Armenia's use of cluster munitions in multiple attacks on Azerbaijani civilian areas. Its researchers documented four attacks with cluster munitions in three of the country's districts, Barda, Goranboy and Tartar which killed at least seven civilians, including two children, and wounded close to 20, including two children. Human Rights Watch also stated that as Nagorno-Karabakh forces do not possess cluster munitions, it is likely that Armenian forces carried out the attacks or supplied the munitions to Nagorno-Karabakh forces.[355]

Azerbaijani

Camera footage of Azerbaijan's use of cluster munition on Stepanakert during a shelling on 4 October 2020.
Stepanakert after the shelling on 4 October 2020.

On 4 October 2020, the Armenian government stated Azerbaijan had deployed cluster munitions against residential targets in Stepanakert; an Amnesty International investigator condemned this.[356] In an Amnesty International report, the cluster bombs were identified as "Israeli-made M095 DPICM cluster munitions that appear to have been fired by Azerbaijani forces".[357] The next day, Armenian Minister of Foreign Affairs Zohrab Mnatsakanyan stated to Fox News that the targeting of civilian populations in Nagorno-Karabakh by Azerbaijani forces was tantamount to war crimes and called for an end to the "aggression".[358] In November 2020, Aliyev denied using cluster munitions against civilian areas in Stepanakert on the 1, 2, and 3 October 2020 in an interview with BBC News journalist Orla Guerin, describing as "fake news" the statements of other BBC reporters who witnessed the attacks and described them as "indiscriminate shelling of a town without clear military targets".[359]

During an on-site investigation in Nagorno-Karabakh in October 2020, Human Rights Watch documented four incidents in which Azerbaijan used Israeli-supplied cluster munitions against civilian areas of Nagorno-Karabakh. The HRW investigation team stated that they did not find any sort of military sites in the residential neighbourhoods where the cluster munitions were used and condemned its use against civilian-populated areas. Stephen Goose, arms division director at Human Rights Watch and chair of the Cluster Munition Coalition, stated that "the continued use of cluster munitions – particularly in populated areas – shows flagrant disregard for the safety of civilians". He then added that "the repeated use of cluster munitions by Azerbaijan should cease immediately as their continued use serves to heighten the danger for civilians for years to come". The HRW investigation team also noted that numerous civilian buildings and infrastructure were heavily damaged due to shelling.[360]

On 16 December, Human Rights Watch published a report about two separate attacks, hours apart, on the Ghazanchetsots Cathedral on 8 October in the town of Shusha, known to Armenians as Shushi, suggesting that the church, a civilian object with cultural significance, was an intentional target despite the absence of evidence that it was used for military purposes. The weapon remnants Human Rights Watch collected at the site corroborate the use of guided munitions. "The two strikes on the church, the second one while journalists and other civilians had gathered at the site, appear to be deliberate," said Hugh Williamson, Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "These attacks should be impartially investigated and those responsible held to account."[361]

 
Destroyed housing complex after the Azerbaijani bombardment of Stepanakert

On 15 October 2020, a video surfaced of two captured Armenians being executed by Azerbaijani soldiers;[362] Artsakh authorities identified one as a civilian.[363] Bellingcat analysed the videos and concluded that the footage was real and that both executed were Armenian combatants captured by Azerbaijani forces between 9 and 15 October 2020 and later executed.[362] The BBC also investigated the videos and confirmed that the videos were from Hadrut and were filmed some time between 9–15 October 2020. A probe has been launched by Armenia's human rights defender, Arman Tatoyan, who shared the videos with European Court of Human Rights and who will also show the videos to the UN human rights commissioner, the Council of Europe and other international organisations.[364] The U.N. human rights chief, Michelle Bachelet, stated that "in-depth investigations by media organisations into videos that appeared to show Azerbaijani troops summarily executing two captured Armenians in military uniforms uncovered compelling and deeply disturbing information".[365]

On 10 December, Amnesty International released a report on videos depicting war crimes from both sides. In some of these videos, Azerbaijani soldiers were seen decapitating the head of an Armenian soldier as he was alive. In another video, the victim is an older man in civilian clothes who gets his throat cut before the video abruptly ends.[286]

Beheadings of two elderly ethnic Armenian Civilians by Azerbaijani armed forces have been identified by The Guardian. In videos posted online on 22 November and 3 December, men in Azerbaijani military uniforms hold down and decapitate a man using a knife. One then places the severed head on a dead animal. "This is how we get revenge – by cutting off heads," a voice says off-camera. The victim was identified as Genadi Petrosyan, 69, who had moved to Matadashen in the late 1980s from Sumgait. Another video posted on 7 December showed two soldiers in Azerbaijani military uniforms pinning down an elderly man near a tree. Another soldier passes a knife to one of the attackers, who begins slicing at the victim's neck. The victim was identified as Yuri Asryan, a reclusive 82-year-old who had refused to leave his village, Azokh.[366]

In another video, a villager named Kamo Manasyan is kicked and beaten as blood streams from his right eye and then hit with a rifle stock.[366]

External video
  Nagorno-Karabakh hospital hit by shelling on YouTube

On 16 October, according to Armenia's ombudsman report, an Azerbaijani serviceman had called the brother of an Armenian soldier from the latter's phone number, saying that his brother was with them and that they had beheaded him and were going to post his photos on the internet; according to Armenian sources, they did post the image online.[367] The Humanitarian Aid Relief Trust included the beheading of an Armenian soldier in their reporting.[368]

 
Protesters in Geneva demand the release of Armenian POWs, 15 April 2021

In early November, Armenia applied to European Convention on Human Rights over the videos of the brutal treatment of the bodies of Armenian POWs, which were spread on the social network.[369] On 23 November, ECHR announced that it applies urgent measures in case of Armenian POWs and civilians held in Azerbaijan.[370] Michael Rubin of the Washington Examiner, referring to the beheadings, the torture and mutilations of POWs, stated that, in contrast to Aliyev's reassurance of ethnic Armenians on remaining as residents of Azerbaijan, the actions of the Azerbaijani servicemen "tell a different story".[371] Human Rights Watch reported about the videos depicting physical abuse and humiliation of Armenian POWs by their Azerbaijani captors, adding that the most of the captors did not fear being held accountable, as their faces were visible in the videos.[111] HRW spoke with the families of some of the POWs in the videos, who provided photographs and other documents establishing their identity, and confirmed that these relatives were serving either in the Artsakh Defence Army, or the Armenian armed forces.[111]

 
Artsakhi residents try to remove car tires from a burning car shop after shelling by Azerbaijan's artillery

A criminal case was opened in Azerbaijan over the Armenian POWs videos with the country's Prosecutor General's Office stating that inhuman treatment could result in the criminal prosecution of some soldiers serving in the Azerbaijani Armed Forces. It also stated that many of these videos were fake.[288] On 14 December, the Azerbaijani security forces arrested two Azerbaijani privates and two other warrant officers accused of insulting the bodies of the Armenian servicemen and gravestones belonging to Armenians.[372] The Azerbaijani human rights activists considered the government reaction to the suspected war crimes to be adequate, although some Azerbaijani social media users argued about whether their persecution was justified, also criticising Armenia not investigating its suspected war crimes.[373]

On 19 March 2021, Human Rights Watch published a report regarding Armenian prisoners of war abused by Azerbaijani forces, subjecting them to cruel and degrading treatment and torture either when they were captured, during their transfer, or while in custody at various detention facilities. Hugh Williamson, Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch, named these actions by Azerbaijani forces "abhorrent and a war crime".[110]

On 3 May 2021, Artak Zeynalyan reported that Azerbaijani servicemen tortured and killed 19 Armenian POWs, which is a war crime. The list of 19 killed includes 12 civilians and seven servicemen.[374] According to Human Rights Defender of Armenia Arman Tatoyan, the study of the collected videos and photos shows that the tortures, cruelties, and inhuman treatment by the Azerbaijani Armed Forces against Armenian POWs have been committed with motives of ethnic hatred.[375]

White phosphorus use allegations

In late October and early November, Azerbaijan accused the Armenian forces of using white phosphorus on civilian areas.[376][377] Then, on 4 November, Azerbaijan National Agency for Mine Action (ANAMA) reported finding unexploded white phosphorus munitions in Səhləbad, near Tartar, which, according to Azerbaijan, were fired by the Armenian forces.[378][379] Azerbaijani authorities claimed the Armenian forces were transporting white phosphorus into the region.[380] On 20 November, Prosecutor General's Office of Azerbaijan filed a lawsuit, accusing the Armenian Armed Forces of using phosphorus ammunition in Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as in Tartar District, and chemical munitions to "inflict large-scale and long-term harm to the environment" in Fuzuli and Tartar Districts, as well as around Shusha.[381]

On 30 October, Armenian and Artsakh authorities had accused the Azerbaijani forces of using phosphorus to burn forests near Shusha.[382][383] This was supported by "Ecocide alert" from 51 non-governmental organisations under the auspices of Transparency International.[384] France 24 reported that Azerbaijan could have used white phosphorus during the war, highlighting that its use is strictly regulated under an international agreement that neither Azerbaijan nor Armenia have signed.[385] A reporter of The Independent who visited the National Burns Centre in Yerevan saw the soldiers' burns, which, according to deputy director of the centre, were consistent with white phosphorus damage in 80% cases.[386] Patrick Knipper, an orthopaedic surgeon and a specialist in severe burns at the Assistance Publique – Hôpitaux de Paris, who was in Yerevan as part of a French assistance mission to help with the treatment of the injured arriving from the front, provided the first independent confirmation of burns being the result of white phosphorus munition use to Le Point magazine, highlighting the characteristic deep burns, hypocalcaemia and sudden deaths in his conclusion[387][388] Azerbaijan denied using white phosphorus.[389] Two interviewed Russian military experts did not find evidence provided by the Armenian side to be convincing, and expressed their doubts that white phosphorus was used by either side of the conflict.[390][391] However, on 22 September 2021, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the Amendment, calling for a report on Azerbaijani war crimes, including the use of illegal munitions and white phosphorus against Armenian civilians.[392][393]

Aftermath

Armenia

 
Protests in Yerevan against the terms of a cease-fire agreement on 18 November 2020.[394]

Shortly after the news about the signing the ceasefire agreement broke in the early hours of 10 November violent protests erupted in Armenia against Nikol Pashinyan, claiming he was a "traitor" for having accepted the peace deal.[395] Protesters also seized the parliament building by breaking a metal door, and pulled the President of the National Assembly of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan from a car and beat him.[396][397] Throughout November, numerous Armenian officials resigned from their posts, including the Armenian minister of foreign affairs, Zohrab Mnatsakanyan,[398] the minister of defence, David Tonoyan,[399] head of the same ministry's military control service, Movses Hakobyan,[400] and the spokesman of Armenia's Defense Ministry, Artsrun Hovhannisyan.[401]

After the ceasefire agreement was signed, President Armen Sarksyan held a meeting with Karekin II, where they both made a call to declare 22 November as the Day of Remembrance of the Heroes who fell for the Defense of the Motherland in the Artsakh Liberation War.[402] On 16 November, he declared that snap parliamentary elections and Pashinyan's resignation were inevitable, proposing that a process be overseen and managed by an interim "National Accord Government".[403]

On 10 December, the Armenian media reported that an Azerbaijani citizen was detained at night near Berdavan in Tavush Province. It was reported that an Azerbaijani civilian was observed in Berdavan between 4:00 and 5:00 in the morning. The executive head of Berdavan, Smbat Mugdesyan, said that the NSS had taken him away and that he did not know other details. According to the Armenian media, a criminal case was opened against the detained citizen on suspicion of illegally crossing to the Armenian state border. The name of the detained Azerbaijani was not disclosed. According to the BBC Azerbaijani Service, Azerbaijan's Internal Affairs, Foreign Affairs and Defence Ministries said they had no information about the incident.[404]

On 12 December, Azerbaijani trucks, accompanied by the International Committee of the Red Cross and Russian peacekeepers, entered David Bek in Syunik Province of Armenia to pick up the bodies of fallen soldiers. Armenian officials refuted the media reports of Azerbaijani vehicles entering Goris.[405]

On 16 December, the family members of the missing Armenian soldiers gathered in front of the Armenian Ministry of Defence building, demanding information about their loved ones. They were not allowed into the building and Armenian military representatives did not give a response. A scuffle ensued, during which the family members of the missing Armenian soldiers broke through to the building.[406]

Azerbaijan

 
Celebrations in Baku, Azerbaijan after the peace treaty.

The peace agreement and the end of the war was seen as a victory and was widely celebrated in Azerbaijan.[407][408] On 10 November 2020, crowds waved flags in Baku after the peace deal was announced.[409] On 11 November, the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, at a meeting with wounded Azerbaijani servicemen who took part in the war, said that new orders and medals would be established in Azerbaijan, and that he gave appropriate instructions on awarding civilians and servicemen who showed "heroism on the battlefield and in the rear and distinguished themselves in this war." He also proposed the names of these orders and medals.[410] About a week later, at a plenary session of the Azerbaijani National Assembly, a draft law on amendments to the law "On the establishment of orders and medals of the Republic of Azerbaijan" was submitted for discussion.[411] Seventeen new orders and medals were established on the same day in the first reading in accordance with the bill "On the establishment of orders and medals of the Republic of Azerbaijan".[412] In mid-November, Aliyev and Azerbaijan's First Vice-president, Mehriban Aliyeva, visited Fuzuli and Jabrayil Districts, both of which were ghost towns in ruins after the Armenian forces occupied it in 1993.[413] Aliyev ordered the State Agency of Azerbaijan Automobile Roads to construct a new highway, starting from Alxanlı, which will connect Fuzuli to Shusha.[414] In Jabrayil, Aliyev stated that a "new master plan" will be drawn up to rebuild the city.[415]

 
Azerbaijani Sukhoi Su-25 fighter jets during the victory parade in Baku on 10 December.

27 September and 10 November were declared Memorial Day and Victory Day respectively,[416][417] although the latter's date was changed to 8 November as it overlapped with Mustafa Kemal Atatürk's Memorial Day in Turkey.[418] It was also announced that the new station in the Baku Metro will be named 8 November at the suggestion of Aliyev.[419] On the same day, President Aliyev signed a decree on the establishment of the YASHAT Foundation to support the families of those wounded and killed during the war, and general control over the management of the foundation was transferred to the ASAN service.[420] On 2 December, the Association of Banks of Azerbaijan announced that the bank debts of servicemen and civilians killed during the war in Azerbaijan would be completely written off.[421] On 4 December, at 12:00 (GMT+4) local time, a moment of silence was held in Azerbaijan to commemorate the fallen soldiers of the war.[422][423] Flags were lowered across the country, and traffic halted, while ships moored in the Bay of Baku, as well as cars honked their horns.[424] A unity prayer was held at the Heydar Mosque in Baku in memory of those killed in the war, and Shaykh al-Islām Allahshukur Pashazadeh, chairman of the Religious Council of the Caucasus, said that "Sunnis and Shiites prayed for the souls of our martyrs together." Commemoration ceremonies were also held in mosques in Sumgayit, Guba, Ganja, Shamakhi, Lankaran, Shaki, in churches in Baku and Ganja, and in the synagogue of Ashkenazi Jews in Baku.[425] On 9 December, President Aliyev awarded 83 servicemen with the title of Hero of the Patriotic War,[426] 204 servicemen with Karabakh Order,[427] and 33 servicemen with Zafar Order.[428]

A victory parade was held on 10 December in honour of the Azerbaijani victory on Azadliq Square,[429] with 3,000 military servicemen who distinguished themselves during the war marched alongside military equipment, unmanned aerial vehicles and aircraft,[430] as well as Armenian war trophies,[431] and Turkish soldiers and officers.[432] Turkish President Erdoğan attended the military parade as part of a state visit to Baku.[433] In April 2021, Azerbaijan opened a Military Trophy Park featuring items from the conflict.[434]

According to peer-reviewed journal Caucasus Survey:[435]

…for the first time in the post-Soviet era, the Azerbaijani leadership has achieved a high degree of social solidarity. All opposition parties and organizations, including the Popular Front, Musavat, ReAl, and National Council, expressed their full support for the war. The citizens acquired a shared emotional experience of “making history”. (...) The government received the stamp of approval from its most vicious critics. The authoritarian government and the civil society it long persecuted were united in the name of homeland. The definition of homeland, consequently, has been reduced to a military victory for the soil, not values or the rights or lives of its people. By supporting a war the government waged, both the opposition and civil society contributed to the creation of a new source and reserve of legitimacy for authoritarianism. Further, while the opposition and civil society criticized the regime in Russia for its authoritarianism and imperialist nationalism, the majority of them did not express misgivings about the no less authoritarian and imperialist politics of Turkey, and enthusiastically embraced ultra-right pan-Turkism.

Transfer of territories and flight of Armenian population

 
Russian peacekeepers and Azerbaijani military personnel near Dadivank of Kalbajar District.
External video
  Nagorno-Karabakh: The families burning down their own homes on YouTube

The Armenian population of the territories ceded to Azerbaijan was forced to flee to Armenia, sometimes destroying their houses and livestock to keep them out of Azerbaijani hands.[436][437]

Turkish-Russian peacekeeping

Post-ceasefire clashes

Canada's boycott of arms exports to Turkey

In 2020, Canada suspended arms exports to Turkey due to accusations of the use of Canadian technology in the conflict, in violation of end-use assurances Turkey had given to Canada. Turkey criticised the Canadian decision.[438] In 2021, Canada prohibited arms exports to Turkey after an investigation verified the accusations.[439] Turkey protested that the embargo will harm bilateral relations and NATO alliance solidarity.[440]

Analysis

Nationalist sentiment

While Armenians and Azerbaijanis lived side by side under Soviet rule, the collapse of the Soviet Union contributed to racialisation and fierce nationalism, causing both Armenians and Azerbaijanis to stereotype each other, shaping rhetoric on both sides.[441] Before, during and after the First Nagorno-Karabakh War, the growth of anti-Armenian and anti-Azerbaijan sentiment resulted in ethnic violence, including pogroms against Armenians in Azerbaijan, as in Sumgait and Baku,[442][443][444][445] and against Azerbaijanis in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, as at Gugark and Stepanakert.[135][136][137][138]

Azerbaijani aims

 
Most of Azerbaijan's initial successful advances were concentrated in the areas located along the Aras River, which has less mountainous terrain compared to the region's northern and central territories.

In a 27 September 2020 interview, regional expert Thomas de Waal said that it was highly unlikely that hostilities were initiated by the Armenian side, as they were already in possession of the disputed territory and were incentivised to normalise the status quo, while "for various reasons, Azerbaijan calculate[d] that military action w[ould] win it something".[446] The suspected immediate goal of the Azerbaijani offensive was to capture the districts of Fuzuli and Jabrayil in southern Nagorno-Karabakh, where the terrain is less mountainous and more favourable for offensive operations.[97] Political scientist Arkady Dubnov of the Carnegie Moscow Center[447][448] believed that Azerbaijan had launched the offensive to improve Azerbaijan's position in a suitable season for hostilities in the terrain.[449]

Turkey and Russia

The geostrategic interests of Russia and Turkey in the region were widely commented upon during the war.[450] Both were described as benefiting from the ceasefire agreement, with The Economist stating that for Russia, China and Turkey, "all sides stand to benefit economically".[451] In late October, massed Russian airstrikes targeted a training camp for Failaq al-Sham, one of the largest Turkish-backed Sunni Islamist rebel groups in Syria's Idlib province, killing 78 militants in an act widely interpreted as a warning shot to Ankara over the latter's involvement in the Nagorno-Karabakh fighting.[452][453]

Turkey

Azerbaijan and Turkey are bound by ethnic, cultural and historic ties, and both countries refer to their relationship as being one between "two states, one nation".[454] Turkey (then the Ottoman Empire) helped Azerbaijan, previously part of the Russian Empire gain its independence in 1918, and became the first country to recognise Azerbaijan's independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.[455] Turkey has also been the guarantor of the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic, an exclave of Azerbaijan, since 1921.[456][457] Other commentators have seen Turkey's support for Azerbaijan as part of an activist foreign policy, linking it with neo-Ottoman policies in Syria, Iraq, and the Eastern Mediterranean.[458][459] Turkey's highly visible role in the conflict was described by Armenians as a continuation of the Armenian genocide, the mass murder and expulsion of 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman government, particularly given Turkey's continued denial of the genocide.[460][461][462][463] Turkey provided military support to Azerbaijan, including military experts and Syrian mercenaries.[451] The transport communications stipulated by the ceasefire agreement, linking Nakhchivan and the main part of Azerbaijan through Armenia, would provide Turkey with trade access to Central Asia and China's Belt and Road Initiative.[451]

Russia

Russia had sought to maintain good relations with Azerbaijan and had sold weapons to both parties. Even prior to the war, Russia had possessed a military base in Armenia as part of a military alliance with Armenia, and thus was obligated by treaty to defend Armenia in the case of a war. Like in Syria and in Libya's ongoing civil war, Russia and NATO-member Turkey therefore had opposing interests.[464] Turkey appeared to use the conflict to attempt to leverage its influence in the South Caucasus along its eastern border, using both military and diplomatic resources to extend its sphere of influence in the Middle East, and to marginalise the influence of Russia, another regional power.[465][466] Russia had historically pursued a policy of maintaining neutrality in the conflict, and Armenia never formally requested aid.[96] According to the director of the Russia studies program at the CNA, at the beginning of the war Russia was judged to be unlikely to intervene militarily unless Armenia incurred drastic losses.[96] The Russian MoFA also released a statement, saying that Russia will provide Armenia with "all the necessary assistance" if the war continued on the territories of Armenia, as both countries are part of the Collective Security Treaty Organization.[467][468] Nonetheless, when the Azerbaijani forces reportedly struck the Armenian territories on 14 October 2020, Russia did not directly interfere in the conflict.[469] In a piece published by the Russian broadsheet Vedomosti on 10 November, Konstantin Makienko, a member of the State Duma Defence Committee, wrote that the geopolitical consequences of the war were "catastrophic" not only for Armenia but for Russia as well, because Moscow's influence in the Southern Caucasus had dwindled while "the prestige of a successful and feisty Turkey, contrariwise, had increased immensely".[470] Alexander Gabuev of the Carnegie Moscow Center took the opposite view, describing the peace agreement as "a win for Russia", as it had "prevented the conclusive defeat of Nagorno-Karabakh" and, by placing Russia in charge of the strategic Lachin corridor, boosted the country's leverage in the region.[471]

The relative success of Azerbaijan in meeting its strategic goals to gain control over Nagorno-Karabakh via the use of military force may have influenced the Russian decision to invade Ukraine in 2022.[472]

Military tactics

 
Bayraktar TB2 at 2020 Baku Victory Parade. Bayraktar TB2 drones were used extensively by Azerbaijani forces during the war.

Azerbaijan's oil wealth allowed a consistently higher military budget than Armenia,[451] and it purchased advanced weapons systems from Israel, Russia and Turkey.[155] Despite the similar size of both militaries, Azerbaijan possessed superior tanks, armoured personnel carriers and infantry fighting vehicles,[158] and had also amassed a fleet of Turkish and Israeli drones. Armenia built its own drones, but these were greatly inferior to the Turkish and Israeli drones owned by Azerbaijan.[158] Azerbaijan had a quantitative advantage in artillery systems, particularly self-propelled guns and long-range multiple rocket launchers, while Armenia had a minor advantage in tactical ballistic missiles.[46] Because of the air defence systems of both sides, there was little use of manned aviation during the conflict.[158] In the opinion of military analyst Michael Kofman, Director of the Russia Studies Program at the CNA and a Fellow at the Kennan Institute, Azerbaijan deployed mercenaries from Syria to minimise Azeri troop casualties: "They took quite a few casualties early on, especially in the south-east, and these mercenaries were essentially used as expendable assault troops to go in the first wave. They calculated quite cynically that if it turned out these offensives were not successful early on, then it was best these casualties would be among mercenaries not Azerbaijani forces."[4]

According to Gustav Gressel, a Senior Policy Fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, the Armenian Army was superior to the Azerbaijani Army on a tactical level, with better officers, more agile leadership, and higher motivation in soldiers but these were overcome by Azerbaijan's innovative use of drones to discover Armenian forward and reserve positions followed by conventional artillery and ballistic missiles to isolate and destroy Armenian forces.[166] Gressel argues that European militaries are not better prepared for anti-drone warfare than Armenia's (with only France and Germany having some limited jamming capabilities) and warns that a lack of gun-based self-propelled air-defence systems and radar systems capable of tracking drones (using "plot-fusion" of several radar echoes) makes European forces extremely vulnerable to loitering munitions and small drones.[166]

In the opinion of a Forbes magazine contributor, Azerbaijan managed to inflict a devastating and decisive defeat through adept usage of sophisticated military hardware which avoided bogging down in a costly war of attrition. According to Forbes, Azerbaijan had prepared itself for tomorrow's war rather than a repeat of yesterday's war.[473]

The International Institute for Strategic Studies presented a summary of analyses by Russian military experts, who concluded that the Azerbaijani victory was not just a result of drone warfare and Turkish assistance, but could actually be attributed to a number of other factors, such as a more professional army with recent battlefield experience, employment by Armenia of Soviet-era tactics against the modern warfare waged by Azerbaijan, a strong national will to fight on part of Azerbaijan compared to irresolute Armenian leadership, and the Armenians believing their own propaganda and underestimating the enemy.[474]

In the opinion voiced by Russian military expert Vladimir Yevseev after the war, for unclear reasons Armenia appeared not to have executed the mobilisation it had announced and hardly any mobilised personnel were deployed to the conflict area.[475]

Drone warfare

 
The Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline (green) is one of several pipelines running from Baku.

Azerbaijan made devastating use of drones and sensors, demonstrating what The Economist described as a "new, more affordable type of air power".[155] Azerbaijani drones, notably the Turkish-made Bayraktar TB2, carried out precise strikes as well as reconnaissance, relaying the coordinates of targets to Azerbaijani artillery.[100] Commentators noted how drones enabled small countries to conduct effective air campaigns, potentially making low-level conflicts much more deadly.[476] Close air support was provided by specialised suicide drones such as the Israeli-made IAI Harop loitering munition, rendering tanks vulnerable and suggesting the need for changes to armoured warfare doctrine.[477] Another suicide drone, the Turkish-made STM Kargu, was also reportedly used by Azerbaijan.[478][65]

Targeting of pipelines

Concerns were raised about the security of the petroleum industry in Azerbaijan.[479][480] Azerbaijan claimed that Armenia targeted, or tried to target, the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline, which accounted for around 80% of country's oil exports, and the Baku–Novorossiysk pipeline.[481][482][483] Armenia rejected the accusations.[484]

Use of propaganda

 
Billboards in Yerevan began displaying footage released by the Armenian Ministry of Defence at the beginning of the conflict.

Both sides engaged in extensive propaganda campaigns through official mainstream and social media accounts magnified online,[101] including in Russian media. Video from drones recording their kills was used in highly effective Azerbaijani propaganda.[100][155] In Baku, digital billboards broadcast high-resolution footage of missiles striking Armenian soldiers, tanks, and materiel. Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev told Turkish television that Azerbaijani-operated drones had reduced the number of Azerbaijan's casualties, stating, "These drones show Turkey's strength" and "empower" Azerbaijanis.[158]

Cyberwarfare

Hackers from Armenia and Azerbaijan as well as their allied countries have waged cyberwarfare, with Azerbaijani hackers targeting Armenian websites and posting Aliyev's statements,[485] and Greek hackers targeting Azerbaijani governmental websites.[486] There have been coordinated messages posted from both sides. Misinformation and videos of older events and other conflicts have been shared as new. New social media accounts posting about Armenia and Azerbaijan have spiked, with many from authentic users, but many inauthentic also.[487][488]

Official statements

Armenia and Artsakh

On 27 September 2020, the Prime Minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan, accused the Azerbaijani authorities of a large-scale provocation. The Prime Minister stated that the "recent aggressive statements of the Azerbaijani leadership, large-scale joint military exercises with Turkey, as well as the rejection of OSCE proposals for monitoring" indicated that the aggression was pre-planned and constituted a major violation of regional peace and security.[489] The next day, Armenia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) issued a statement, noting that the "people of Artsakh were at war with the Turkish–Azerbaijani alliance".[490]

The same day, the Armenian ambassador to Russia, Vardan Toganyan, did not rule out that Armenia may turn to Russia for fresh arms supplies.[491] On 29 September 2020, Prime Minister Pashinyan stated that Azerbaijan, with military support from Turkey, was expanding the theatre into Armenian territory.[492] On 30 September 2020, Pashinyan stated that Armenia was considering officially recognising the Republic of Artsakh as an independent territory.[493] The same day, the Armenian MoFA stated that the Turkish Air Force had carried out provocative flights along the front between the forces of the Republic of Artsakh and Azerbaijan, including providing air support to the Azerbaijani army.[494]

On 1 October 2020, the President of Artsakh, Arayik Harutyunyan, stated that Armenians needed to prepare for a long-term war.[495] Two days later, the Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) Foreign Ministry called on the international community to recognise the independence of the Republic of Artsakh in order to restore regional peace and security.[496]

On 6 October 2020, the Armenian prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan, stated that the Armenian side was prepared to make concessions, if Azerbaijan was ready to reciprocate.[497]

On 9 October 2020, Armen Sarkissian demanded that international powers, particularly, the United States, Russia and NATO, do more to stop Turkey's involvement in the war and warned that Ankara is creating "another Syria in the Caucasus".[498]

On 21 October 2020, Nikol Pashinyan stated that "it is impossible to talk about a diplomatic solution at this stage, at least at this stage", since the compromise option is not acceptable for Azerbaijan, while the Armenian side stated many times that it is ready to resolve the issue through compromises. Pashinyan said that "to fight for the rights of our people means, first of all, to take up arms and commit to the protection of the rights of the homeland".[499]

On 12 November 2020, Pashinyan addressed his nation, saying that "Armenia and the Armenian people are living extremely difficult days. There is sorrow in the hearts of all of us, tears in the eyes of all of us, pain in the souls of all of us". The prime minister pointed out that the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Armenia reported that the war "must be stopped immediately". And the President of Artsakh warned that if the hostilities do not stop, Stepanakert could be lost in days. Pashinyan also stated that the Karabakh issue was not resolved and is not resolved and that the international recognition of the Artsakh Republic is becoming an absolute priority.[500]

Azerbaijan

 
Meeting of the Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev with the country's Security Council on 27 September 2020

According to the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence, the Armenian military violated the ceasefire 48 times along the line of contact on 26 September 2020, the day before the conflict. Azerbaijan stated that the Armenian side attacked first, prompting an Azerbaijani counter-offensive.[501]

On 27 September 2020, Azerbaijan accused Armenian forces of a "willful and deliberate" attack on the front line[502] and of targeting civilian areas, alleging a "gross violation of international humanitarian law".[503] On 28 September 2020, it stated that Armenia's actions had destroyed the peace negotiations through an act of aggression,[504] alleged that a war had been launched against Azerbaijan, mobilised the people of Azerbaijan, and declared a Great Patriotic War.[505] It then stated that the deployment of the Armenian military in Nagorno-Karabakh constituted a threat to regional peace and accused Armenia of propagandising, adding that the Azerbaijani military was operating according to international law.[506] The Azerbaijani authorities issued a statement accusing the Armenian military of purposefully targeting civilians, including women and children.[507] The Azerbaijani Minister of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) denied any reports of Turkish involvement, while admitting military-technical cooperation with Turkey and other countries.[508]

On 29 September 2020, the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, said that Armenian control of the area and aggression had led to the destruction of infrastructure and mosques, caused the Khojaly massacre and resulted in cultural genocide, and was tantamount to state-backed Islamophobia and anti-Azerbaijani sentiment.[509] The Azerbaijani MoFA demanded that Armenia stop shelling civilians and called on international organisations to ensure Armenia followed international law.[510] Azerbaijan denied reports of mercenaries brought in from Turkey by Azerbaijan,[511][512] and the First Vice-president of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Mehriban Aliyeva, stated that Azerbaijan had never laid claim to others' territory nor committed crimes against humanity.[513]

On 3 October 2020, Aliyev stated that Armenia needed to leave Azerbaijan's territory (in Nagorno-Karabakh) for the war to stop.[514] The next day, Aliyev issued an official statement that Azerbaijan was "writing a new history", describing Karabakh as an ancient Azerbaijani territory and longstanding home to Azerbaijanis, and claiming that Armenians had occupied Azerbaijan's territory, destroying its religious and cultural heritage, for three decades. He added that Azerbaijan would restore its cities and destroyed mosques and accused Armenia of distorting history.[515]

Two days later, Aliyev's aide, Hikmat Hajiyev, said that Armenia had deployed cluster munitions against cities,[516] however this had not been verified by other sources. On 7 October 2020, Azerbaijan officially notified members of the World Conference on Constitutional Justice, the Conference of European Constitutional Courts, the Association of Asian Constitutional Courts and similar organisations that it had launched the operation in line with international law to re-establish its internationally recognised territorial integrity and for the safety of its people.[517] He also accused Armenia of ethnic discrimination on account of the historical expulsion or self-exile of ethnic minority communities, highlighting its mono-ethnic population.[518]

On 10 October 2020, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov stated that the truce signed on the same day was temporary.[519] Despite this, Aliyev stated that both parties were now attempting to determine a political resolution to the conflict.[520]

On 21 October 2020, Aliyev stated that Azerbaijan did not rule out the introduction of international observers and peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh, but will put forward some conditions when the time comes.[521] He then added that Azerbaijan did not agree for a referendum in Nagorno-Karabakh,[522] but didn't exclude the cultural autonomy of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh,[521] and reaffirmed that the Azerbaijan considers Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh as their citizens, promising security and rights.[523]

On 26 October 2020, Aliyev stated that the Azerbaijani government will inspect and record the destruction by Armenian forces in Armenian-occupied territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh during the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.[524]

Allegations of third-party involvement

Because of the geography, history, and sensitivities of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, accusations, allegations, and statements have been made of involvement by third-party and international actors.

International reactions

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Denied by Azerbaijan[1][2] and Turkey.[3]
  2. ^ Turkey and Azerbaijan deny direct involvement of Turkey.[14][15][16]
  3. ^ Reported by Azerbaijan,[23] and some Armenian military officials,[24] also reports that Russia supplied arms to Armenia via Iran.[25][26][27] It has been denied by Iran.[28][29]
  4. ^ On 21 October 2021, the Ministry of Defence of the Republic of Azerbaijan published a list of dead servicemen. It said 2,908 people were killed during the war,[59] although at least two of the soldiers named were killed after the conflict ended,[73][74] leaving a total of 2,906 servicemen confirmed killed in the war.
  5. ^ a b By 27 September 2021, 84 civilians were confirmed killed in the conflict, 80 of which died in the Republic of Artsakh and 4 were killed in Armenia.[1][2] Another 22 were still missing.[3] Subsequently, the number of civilians missing was updated to 21 by 21 March 2022,[4] bringing the total number of confirmed civilian fatalities to 85.
  6. ^ Nagorno-Karabakh was an autonomous region of Azerbaijan during the Soviet era, and is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan. At the end of Soviet period, it was recorded as being populated by 76.9% Armenians, 21.5% Azerbaijanis, and 1.5% other groups, totalling 188,685 persons, in the 1989 census. The surrounding districts, occupied by the Republic of Artsakh since the 1994 ceasefire, were recorded in the 1979 census to have a population of 97.7% Azerbaijanis, 1.3% Kurds, 0.7% Russians, 0.1% Armenians, and 0.1% Lezgins, for a total of 186,874 persons. This does not include the populations of Fuzuli District and Agdam District, which were only partially under Armenian control before the 2020 war.

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second, nagorno, karabakh, this, article, about, armed, conflict, over, nagorno, karabakh, region, 2020, armed, conflict, between, 1988, 1994, first, nagorno, karabakh, part, nagorno, karabakh, conflict, areas, captured, azerbaijan, during, areas, ceded, azerb. This article is about the armed conflict over the Nagorno Karabakh region in 2020 For the armed conflict between 1988 and 1994 see First Nagorno Karabakh War Second Nagorno Karabakh WarPart of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict Areas captured by Azerbaijan during the war Areas ceded to Azerbaijan under the ceasefire agreement Areas in Nagorno Karabakh proper remaining under the control of Artsakh Lachin corridor and Dadivank monastery patrolled by Russian peacekeepersFor a more detailed map see the Nagorno Karabakh conflict detailed mapDate27 September 2020 2020 09 27 10 November 2020 2020 11 10 1 month and 2 weeks 30 LocationNagorno Karabakh and surrounding Armenian occupied territories Armenia Azerbaijan borderResultAzerbaijani victory 31 32 Ceasefire agreement signed on 10 November 2020 30 Russian peacekeeping forces deployed to the region 33 TerritorialchangesDuring the conflict Azerbaijan regains control of 5 cities 4 towns 286 villages 34 and the entire Azerbaijan Iran borderPost ceasefire Azerbaijan retains control of territories captured during the war All Armenian occupied territories surrounding Nagorno Karabakh ceded back to Azerbaijan by 1 December 2020 35 All economic and transport connections in the region to be unblocked including transport connections between Nakhchivan and the rest of AzerbaijanBelligerents Azerbaijan Syrian mercenaries a 4 5 6 7 8 Turkey alleged by Armenia 9 10 11 Supported by Turkey 12 13 b Arms suppliers Israel 17 18 Artsakh Armenia Armenian diaspora volunteers 19 20 21 22 Arms suppliers Russia c Commanders and leadersIlham Aliyev Zakir Hasanov Karim Valiyev Hikmat Mirzayev 36 Mais Barkhudarov 37 Hikmat Hasanov 38 Kanan Seyidov Zaur Javanshir Elchin Guliyev 39 Ilham Mehdiyev Ramiz Tahirov Namig IslamzadehArayik Harutyunyan Jalal Harutyunyan WIA 40 Mikael Arzumanyan 40 Karen Jalavyan Artur Sargsyan 41 Hovhannes Avagyan 42 Nikol Pashinyan Armen Sarkissian Vahagn Asatryan 43 David Tonoyan Onik Gasparyan Tiran Khachatryan 44 Units involvedAzerbaijan Azerbaijani Armed ForcesAzerbaijani Land Forces1st Corps 45 2nd Corps 46 3rd Corps 47 4th Corps 47 Nakhchivan Garrison 47 Special Forces 48 Azerbaijani NavyMarine Infantry Battalion 49 Azerbaijani Air Forces 50 State Border Service 39 Ministry of Internal AffairsInternal Troops 51 Foreign Intelligence ServiceYARASA Special Forces az tr 52 Syrian mercenaries 15 Hamza Division 53 Sultan Murad Division 53 Artsakh Artsakh Defence Army Armenia Armed Forces of ArmeniaNational Security Service 54 Police of Armenia 55 Homeland Detachment 56 Erato Detachment 57 Strength14 272 servicemen 58 59 2 580 Syrian fighters 60 Equipment Various types of tanks and armoured vehicles including T 90 T 72 BMP 1 BMP 2 BMP 3 and BTR 82 15 61 Unknown number of Bayraktar TB2 combat drone 62 61 Unknown number of IAI Harop Orbiter 1K and STM Kargu suicide drones 63 64 65 Unknown number of converted Antonov An 2 used as unmanned drone for different roles 66 Various MRLs including TRG 300 guided MRLs and BM 30 Smerches 67 61 Various anti aircraft missiles including S 300s 68 Various artillery 69 Unknown regular militaryEquipment T 72 tanks and various types of armoured vehicles including BMP 1 BMP 2 and MT LB 15 61 Scud B and OTR 21 Tochka tactical ballistic missiles 61 70 Various MRLs including BM 30 Smerches WM 80s and BM 21 Grads 71 61 Various anti aircraft missiles including S 300s Osas and Strela 10s 15 72 Various types of anti tank guided missiles 15 Various artillery 69 Su 25 ground attack aircraft 68 Casualties and lossesPer Azerbaijan 2 906 servicemen killed d 6 servicemen missing 59 11 110 servicemen wounded 75 14 servicemen captured 76 Per SOHR 541 Syrian mercenaries killed 60 3 Syrian mercenaries captured 77 See Casualties for detailsPer Armenia Artsakh 3 825 servicemen killed 78 187 servicemen missing 79 11 000 servicemen wounded and sick 80 60 servicemen captured 81 See Casualties and Prisoners of war for details100 Azerbaijani 82 and 85 Armenian civilians killed e 21 Armenian civilians missing 79 416 Azerbaijani 82 and 165 Armenian civilians injured 83 84 3 Azerbaijani 85 and 40 Armenian civilians captured 86 1 Russian Mi 24 shot down 2 crew members killed 1 injured 87 1 Russian civilian killed 88 2 French 89 and 3 Russian journalists injured 90 1 Iranian civilian injured by stray fire 91 40 000 Azerbaijanis 92 and 100 000 Armenians displaced 93 94 95 The Second Nagorno Karabakh War was an armed conflict in 2020 that took place in the disputed region of Nagorno Karabakh and the surrounding territories It was a major escalation of an unresolved conflict over the region involving Azerbaijan Armenia and the self declared Armenian breakaway state of Artsakh f The war lasted for more than a month and resulted in Azerbaijani victory with Armenia ceding the territories it had occupied in 1994 surrounding Nagorno Karabakh The defeat ignited anti government protests in Armenia Post war skirmishes continued in the region including substantial clashes in 2022 Fighting began on the morning of 27 September with an Azerbaijani offensive 96 97 along the line of contact established in the aftermath of the First Nagorno Karabakh War 1988 1994 Clashes were particularly intense in the less mountainous districts of southern Nagorno Karabakh 98 Turkey provided military support to Azerbaijan although the extent of this support has been disputed 96 99 The war was marked by the deployment of drones sensors long range heavy artillery 100 and missile strikes as well as by state propaganda and the use of official social media accounts in online information warfare 101 In particular Azerbaijan s widespread use of drones was seen as crucial in determining the conflict s outcome 102 Numerous countries and the United Nations strongly condemned the fighting and called on both sides to de escalate tensions and resume meaningful negotiations 103 Three ceasefires brokered by Russia France and the United States failed to stop the conflict 104 Following the capture of Shusha the second largest city in Nagorno Karabakh a ceasefire agreement was signed ending all hostilities in the area from 10 November 2020 105 106 107 Under the agreement the warring sides kept control of the areas they held within Nagorno Karabakh at the time of the ceasefire Armenia returned the surrounding territories it had occupied since 1994 to Azerbaijan and Azerbaijan was guaranteed transport communication to its exclave Nakhchivan bordering Turkey and Iran 108 Approximately 2 000 Russian soldiers have been deployed as peacekeeping forces along the Lachin corridor connecting Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh with a mandate of at least five years 30 Following the end of the war an unconfirmed number of Armenian prisoners of war were captive in Azerbaijan with reports of mistreatment and charges filed against them 109 110 111 112 leading to a case at the International Court of Justice 113 Contents 1 Naming 2 Background 2 1 Soviet era 2 2 First Nagorno Karabakh War 2 3 Frozen conflict 3 Course of the war 3 1 Overview 3 2 Ceasefire agreement 3 3 Non military actions taken by Armenia and Azerbaijan 3 3 1 Armenia 3 3 2 Azerbaijan 4 Casualties 4 1 Civilians 4 2 Military 4 3 Infrastructure damage 4 4 Equipment losses 5 Suspected war crimes 5 1 Armenian 5 2 Azerbaijani 5 3 White phosphorus use allegations 6 Aftermath 6 1 Armenia 6 2 Azerbaijan 6 3 Transfer of territories and flight of Armenian population 6 4 Turkish Russian peacekeeping 6 5 Post ceasefire clashes 6 6 Canada s boycott of arms exports to Turkey 7 Analysis 7 1 Nationalist sentiment 7 2 Azerbaijani aims 7 3 Turkey and Russia 7 3 1 Turkey 7 3 2 Russia 7 4 Military tactics 7 4 1 Drone warfare 7 4 2 Targeting of pipelines 7 4 3 Use of propaganda 7 4 4 Cyberwarfare 8 Official statements 8 1 Armenia and Artsakh 8 2 Azerbaijan 9 Allegations of third party involvement 10 International reactions 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksNamingThe war has been referred to as the Second Nagorno Karabakh War 114 115 and has also been called the 44 Day War in both Armenia and Azerbaijan 116 117 In Armenia and Artsakh it has been called the Second Artsakh War Armenian Արցախյան երկրորդ պատերազմ romanized Arts akhyan yerkrord paterazm 118 119 Patriotic War 120 and the Fight for Survival Armenian Գոյամարտ romanized Goyamart 121 In Azerbaijan it has been called the Second Karabakh War Azerbaijani Ikinci Qarabag muharibesi 122 and Patriotic War 123 124 The Azerbaijani government referred to it as an operation for peace enforcement 125 and counter offensive operation 126 It later announced it had initiated military operations under the code name Operation Iron Fist Azerbaijani Demir Yumruq emeliyyati 127 BackgroundFurther information History of Nagorno Karabakh and Nagorno Karabakh conflict The territorial ownership of Nagorno Karabakh is fiercely contested between Armenians and Azerbaijanis The current conflict has its roots in events following World War I and today the region is de jure part of Azerbaijan although large parts are de facto held by the internationally unrecognised Republic of Artsakh which is supported by Armenia 128 Soviet era Main article Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast During the Soviet era the predominantly Armenian populated region was governed as an autonomous oblast within the Azerbaijan SSR 129 As the Soviet Union began to disintegrate during the late 1980s the question of Nagorno Karabakh s status re emerged and on 20 February 1988 the parliament of the Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast passed a resolution requesting transfer of the oblast from the Azerbaijan SSR to the Armenian SSR Azerbaijan rejected the request several times 130 and ethnic violence began shortly thereafter with a series of pogroms between 1988 and 1990 against Armenians in Sumgait Ganja and Baku 131 132 133 134 and against Azerbaijanis in Gugark and Stepanakert 135 136 137 138 Following the revocation of Nagorno Karabakh s autonomous status an independence referendum was held in the region on 10 December 1991 The referendum was boycotted by the Azerbaijani population which then constituted around 22 8 of the region s population 99 8 of participants voted in favour In early 1992 following the Soviet Union s collapse the region descended into outright war 130 dead link First Nagorno Karabakh War Main article First Nagorno Karabakh War Ethnic groups of the region in 1995 following the end of the First Nagorno Karabakh War and the displacement of the region s Azerbaijani and ethnic Armenian population See entire map The First Nagorno Karabakh War resulted in the displacement of approximately 725 000 Azerbaijanis and 300 000 500 000 Armenians from both Azerbaijan and Armenia 139 The 1994 Bishkek Protocol brought the fighting to an end and resulted in significant Armenian territorial gains in addition to controlling most of Nagorno Karabakh the Republic of Artsakh also occupied the surrounding Azerbaijani populated districts of Agdam Jabrayil Fuzuli Kalbajar Qubadli Lachin and Zangilan 140 The terms of the Bishkek agreement produced a frozen conflict 141 and long standing international mediation attempts to create a peace process were initiated by the OSCE Minsk Group in 1994 with the interrupted Madrid Principles being the most recent iteration prior to the 2020 war 142 143 The United Nations Security Council adopted four resolutions in 1993 calling for the withdrawal of occupying forces from the territories surrounding Nagorno Karabakh 144 and in 2008 the General Assembly adopted a resolution demanding the immediate withdrawal of Armenian occupying forces 145 although the co chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group Russia France and USA voted against it 146 Frozen conflict See also July 2020 Armenian Azerbaijani clashes For three decades multiple violations of the ceasefire occurred the most serious being the four day 2016 Nagorno Karabakh conflict 147 Surveys indicated that the inhabitants of Nagorno Karabakh did not want to be part of Azerbaijan 148 and in 2020 the Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan announced plans to make Shusha a city of historical and cultural significance to both Armenians and Azerbaijanis 131 Artsakh s new capital In August of the same year the government of Artsakh moved the country s parliament to Shusha escalating tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan 149 Further skirmishes occurred on the border between the two countries in July 2020 147 Thousands of Azerbaijanis rallied for war against Armenia in response and Turkey voiced its firm support for Azerbaijan 150 On 29 July 2020 Azerbaijan conducted a series of military exercises that lasted from 29 July to 10 August 2020 151 followed by further exercises in early September with the involvement of Turkey 152 Prior to the resumption of hostilities allegations emerged that Turkey had facilitated the transfer of hundreds of Syrian National Army members from the Hamza Division to Azerbaijan 153 Baku denied the involvement of foreign fighters 154 Course of the warMain article Timeline of the Second Nagorno Karabakh War Overview Approximate frontlines at the time of the ceasefire with Azerbaijan s territorial gains during the war in red the Lachin corridor under Russian peacekeepers in blue and areas ceded by Armenia to Azerbaijan hashed The conflict was characterised by the widespread use of combat drones particularly by Azerbaijan 155 as well as heavy artillery barrages rocket attacks and trench warfare 156 Throughout the campaign Azerbaijan relied heavily on drone strikes against Armenian Artsakh forces inflicting heavy losses upon Armenian tanks artillery air defence systems and military personnel although some Azerbaijani drones were shot down 157 158 It also featured the deployment of cluster munitions which are banned by the majority of the international community but not by Armenia or Azerbaijan 159 Both Armenia 160 and Azerbaijan 161 used cluster munitions against civilian areas outside of the conflict zone 162 A series of missile attacks on Ganja Azerbaijan inflicted mass civilian casualties as did artillery strikes on Stepanakert Artsakh s capital 163 Much of Stepanakert s population fled during the course of the fighting 164 The conflict was accompanied by coordinated attempts to spread misleading content and disinformation via social media and the internet 165 The conflict began with an Azerbaijani ground offensive that included armoured formations supported by artillery and drones including loitering munitions Armenian and Artsakh troops were forced back from their first line of defence in Artsakh s southeast and northern regions but inflicted significant losses on Azerbaijani armoured formations with anti tank guided missiles and artillery destroying dozens of vehicles Azerbaijan made heavy use of drones in strikes against Armenian air defences taking out 13 short range surface to air missile systems Azerbaijani forces used drones to systematically isolate and destroy Armenian Artsakh positions Reconnaissance drones would locate a military position on the front lines and the placement of reserve forces after which the position would be shelled along with roads and bridges that could potentially be used by the reserves to reach the position After the Armenian Artsakh position had been extensively shelled and cut off from reinforcement the Azerbaijanis would move in superior forces to overwhelm it This tactic was repeatedly used to gradually overrun Armenian and Artsakh positions 166 Azerbaijani troops managed to make limited gains in the south in the first three days of the conflict For the next three days both sides largely exchanged fire from fixed positions In the north Armenian Artsakh forces counterattacked managing to retake some ground Their largest counterattack took place on the fourth day but incurred heavy losses when their armour and artillery units were exposed to Azerbaijani attack drones loitering munitions and reconnaissance drones spotting for Azerbaijani artillery as they manoeuvred in the open 46 source source source source source source source source source Day by day animation of the war Red Artsakh blue captured by the Azerbaijani army dotted blue regions in which Azerbaijani special forces were active Azerbaijan targeted infrastructure throughout Artsakh starting on the first day of the war including the use of rocket artillery and cluster munitions against Stepanakert the capital of Artsakh and a missile strike against a bridge in the Lachin Corridor linking Armenia with Artsakh On the 6th day of the war Armenia Artsakh targeted Ganja for the first of four times with ballistic missiles nominally targeting the military portion of Ganja International Airport but instead hitting residential areas On the morning of the seventh day Azerbaijan launched a major offensive The Azerbaijani Army s First Second and Third Army Corps reinforced by reservists from the Fourth Army Corps began an advance in the north making some territorial gains but the Azerbaijani advance stalled 46 Most of the fighting subsequently shifted to the south in terrain that is relatively flat and underpopulated as compared to the mountainous north Azerbaijani forces launched offensives toward Jabrayil and Fuzuli managing to break through the multi layered Armenian Artsakh defensive lines and recapture a stretch of territory held by Armenian troops as a buffer zone but the fighting subsequently stalled 46 Map of the war showing Azerbaijan s day to day advances After the shelling of Martuni 167 Artsakh authorities began mobilising civilians 168 Just before 04 00 00 00 UTC on 10 October 2020 Russia reported that both Armenia and Azerbaijan had agreed on a humanitarian ceasefire after ten hours of talks in Moscow the Moscow Statement and announced that both would enter substantive talks citation needed After the declared ceasefire the President of Artsakh admitted Azerbaijan had been able to achieve some success moving the front deep into Artsakh territory 169 the Armenian Prime Minister announced that Armenian forces had conducted a partial retreat 170 The ceasefire quickly broke down and the Azerbaijani advance continued Within days Azerbaijan announced the capture of dozens of villages on the southern front 171 A second ceasefire attempt midnight 17 October 2020 was also ignored 172 Azerbaijan announced the capture of Jabrayil on 9 October 2020 and Fuzuli on 17 October 2020 Azerbaijani troops also captured the Khoda Afarin Dam and Khodaafarin Bridges Azerbaijan announced that the border area with Iran was fully secured with the capture of Agbend on 22 October 2020 173 Azerbaijani forces then turned northwest advancing towards the Lachin corridor the sole highway between Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh putting it within artillery range According to Artsakh a counterattack repelled forward elements of the Azerbaijani force and pushed them back Armenian Artsakh resistance had managed to halt the Azerbaijani advance to within 25 kilometres of the Lachin corridor by 26 October 2020 Artsakh troops who had retreated into the mountains and forests began launching small unit attacks against exposed Azerbaijani infantry and armour and Armenian forces launched a counteroffensive near the far southwestern border between Armenia and Azerbaijan 174 On 26 October 2020 a US brokered ceasefire came into effect but fighting resumed within minutes 175 176 Three days later the Artsakh authorities stated that the Azerbaijani forces were 5 km 3 1 mi from Shusha 177 On 8 November 2020 Azerbaijani forces seized Shusha 178 the second largest city in Artsakh before the war located 15 kilometres from Stepanakert the republic s capital 179 Although the amount of territory contested was relatively restricted the conflict impacted the wider region in part due to the type of munitions deployed Shells and rockets landed in East Azerbaijan Province Iran although no damage was reported 180 181 and Iran reported that several unmanned aerial vehicles UAVs had been downed or had crashed within its territory 182 183 184 185 Georgia stated that two UAVs had crashed in its Kakheti Province 186 Ceasefire agreement Main article 2020 Nagorno Karabakh ceasefire agreement Map of the ceasefire agreement Azerbaijan outside of the conflict zone Armenia Areas captured by Azerbaijan during the war to stay under its control Agdam District evacuated by Armenia by 20 November 187 188 Kalbajar District evacuated by Armenia by 25 November 189 Lachin District evacuated by Armenia by 1 December 190 Part of Nagorno Karabakh remaining under the control of Artsakh Lachin corridor monitored by Russian peacekeepers Access roads into Nagorno Karabakh All economic and transport connections in the region to be unblocked including transport connections between Nakhchivan and rest of Azerbaijan arrow s hypothetical location chosen by a Wikipedia user and not defined by the statement itself Line of contact before the 2020 conflict Other areas claimed by Artsakh On 9 November 2020 in the aftermath of the capture of Shusha a ceasefire agreement was signed by the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev the Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan and the President of Russia Vladimir Putin ending all hostilities in the zone of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict from 10 November 2020 00 00 Moscow time 105 106 107 The President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan also agreed to end the hostilities 191 Under the terms of the deal both belligerent parties were to exchange prisoners of war and the bodies of the fallen Furthermore Armenian forces were to withdraw from Armenian occupied territories surrounding Nagorno Karabakh by 1 December 2020 while a peacekeeping force provided by the Russian Ground Forces and led by Lieutenant General Rustam Muradov 192 of just under 2 000 soldiers would be deployed for a minimum of five years along the line of contact and the Lachin corridor linking Armenia and the Nagorno Karabakh region Additionally Armenia undertook to guarantee safety of transport communication between Azerbaijan s Nakhchivan exclave and mainland Azerbaijan in both directions while Russia s border troops under the Federal Security Service were to exercise control over the transport communication 193 194 195 On 15 December 2020 after several weeks of cease fire the sides finally exchanged prisoners of war 44 Armenian and 12 Azeri prisoners were exchanged 196 It is unclear whether more prisoners remain in captivity on either side Non military actions taken by Armenia and Azerbaijan Since the beginning of the conflict both Armenia and Azerbaijan declared martial law limiting the freedom of speech Meanwhile a new law came into effect since October 2020 in Armenia which prohibits negative coverage of the situation at the front 197 Restrictions have been reported on the work of international journalists in Azerbaijan with no corresponding restrictions reported in Nagorno Karabakh 198 Armenia A pro military billboard in Republic Square Yerevan on 7 October 2020 On 28 September 2020 Armenia banned men aged over 18 listed in the mobilisation reserve from leaving the country 199 The next day it postponed the trial of former President Robert Kocharyan and other former officials charged in the 2008 post election unrest case owing to one of the defendants the former Defence Minister of Armenia Seyran Ohanyan going to Artsakh during the conflict 200 On 1 October 2020 the Armenian National Security Service NSS stated that it had arrested and charged a former high ranking Armenian military official with treason on suspicion of spying for Azerbaijan 201 Three days later the NSS stated that it had arrested several foreign citizens on suspicion of spying 202 Protesting Israeli arms sales to Azerbaijan Armenia has recalled its ambassador to Israel 203 On 8 October 2020 the Armenian President Armen Sarkissian dismissed the director of the NSS 204 Subsequently the Armenian government toughened the martial law and prohibited criticising state bodies and propaganda aimed at disruption of the defense capacity of the country 205 On the same day the Armenian MoD cancelled a Novaya Gazeta correspondent s journalistic accreditation officially for entering Nagorno Karabakh without accreditation 206 On 9 October 2020 Armenia tightened its security legislation 205 On 21 October 2020 the Armenian Cabinet of Ministers temporarily banned the import of Turkish goods the decision will come into force on 31 December 2020 207 The following day the Armenian parliament passed a law to write off the debts of the Armenian servicemen wounded during the clashes and the debts of the families of those killed 208 On 27 October 2020 the Armenian president Armen Sarkissian dismissed the head of the counterintelligence department of the National Security Service Major General Hovhannes Karumyan and the chief of staff of the border troops of the National Security Service Gagik Tevosyan 209 On 8 November 2020 Sarkissian yet again dismissed the interim head of the National Security Service 210 As of 8 November 2020 one Armenian activist was fined by the police for his anti war post 211 Azerbaijan Azerbaijani flag in Jafar Jabbarly Square near the 28 May station in Baku on 10 October 2020 On 27 September 2020 Azerbaijani authorities restricted internet access shortly after the clashes began 212 stating it was in order to prevent large scale Armenian provocations The government made a noticeable push to use Twitter which was the only unblocked platform in the country Despite the restrictions some Azerbaijanis still used VPNs to bypass them 213 The National Assembly of Azerbaijan declared a curfew in Baku Ganja Goygol Yevlakh and a number of districts from midnight on 28 September 2020 214 215 under the Interior Minister Vilayet Eyvazov 216 Azerbaijan Airlines announced that all airports in Azerbaijan would be closed to regular passenger flights until 30 September 2020 217 The Military Prosecutor s Offices of Fuzuli Tartar Karabakh and Ganja began criminal investigations of war and other crimes 218 Also on 28 September 2020 the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev issued a decree authorising a partial mobilisation in Azerbaijan 219 On 8 October 2020 Azerbaijan recalled its ambassador to Greece for consultations following allegations of Armenians from Greece arriving in Nagorno Karabakh to fight against Azerbaijan 220 Three days later the Azerbaijani State Security Service SSS warned against a potential Armenian backed terror attack 221 On 17 October 2020 the Azerbaijani MoFA stated that member of the Russian State Duma from the ruling United Russia Vitaly Milonov was declared persona non grata in Azerbaijan for visiting Nagorno Karabakh without permission from the Azerbaijani government 222 On 24 October 2020 by recommendation of the Central Bank of Azerbaijan the member banks of the Azerbaijani Banks Association unanimously adopted a decision to write off the debts of the military servicemen and civilians who died during the conflict 223 On 29 October 2020 the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev issued a decree on the formation of temporary commandant s offices in the areas that the Azerbaijani forces seized control of during the conflict According to the decree the commandants will be appointed by the Ministry of Internal Affairs but they will have to coordinate with other executive bodies of the government including Ministry of Defense the State Border Service the State Security Service and ANAMA 224 225 By 31 October 2020 after gaining control of the territories on the border with Iran Azerbaijan had established control over four more border posts 226 By 4 November 2020 six peace activists from Azerbaijan have been called to questioning by the State Security Service due to their anti war activism in Azerbaijan 227 228 229 230 231 On 12 December a decree by President Aliyev lifted the curfew that had been imposed in September 232 CasualtiesMain article Casualties of the Second Nagorno Karabakh War Casualties have been high 233 officially in the low thousands According to official figures released by the belligerents Armenia lost 3 825 troops killed 78 and 187 missing 79 while Azerbaijan lost 2 906 troops killed with six missing in action 59 During the conflict it was noted that the sides downplayed the number of their own casualties and exaggerated the numbers of enemy casualties and injuries 234 Civilians The wall with images of fallen Armenian soldiers According to Artsakhian President mainly 18 20 year old soldiers fought in hostilities 235 The Armenian authorities stated that 85 Armenian civilians were killed during the war e while another 21 were missing 79 According to Azerbaijani sources the Armenian military has targeted densely populated areas containing civilian structures 236 As of 9 November 2020 the Prosecutor General s Office of the Republic of Azerbaijan stated that during the war as a result of reported shelling by Armenian artillery and rocketing 100 people had been killed while 416 people had been wounded 82 Also during the post war clashes the Azerbaijani authorities stated that an Azercell employee was seriously injured during the installation of communication facilities and transmission equipment near Hadrut 237 As of 23 October 2020 the Armenian authorities has stated that the conflict had displaced more than half of Nagorno Karabakh s population or approximately 90 000 people 94 The International Rescue Committee has also claimed that more than half of the population of Nagorno Karabakh has been displaced by the conflict 238 As of 2 November 2020 the Azerbaijani authorities has stated that the conflict had displaced approximately 40 000 people in Azerbaijan 92 Seven journalists have been injured 158 239 On 1 October 2020 two French journalists from Le Monde covering the clashes in Khojavend were injured by Azerbaijani shellfire 240 A week later three Russian journalists reporting in Shusha were seriously injured by an Azerbaijani attack 241 242 On 19 October 2020 according to Azerbaijani sources an Azerbaijani AzTV journalist received shrapnel wounds from Armenian shellfire in Aghdam District 239 Military Wounded Azerbaijani servicemen attending the victory parade on 10 December An Armenian 2S1 Gvozdika captured as a war trophy by the Azerbaijani forces displayed on 10 December during the victory parade Armenian authorities reported the deaths of 3 825 servicemen during the war while the Azerbaijani authorities stated that more than 5 000 Armenian servicemen were killed and several times more were wounded as of 28 October 2020 243 After the war the former director of the Armenian National Security Service Artur Vanetsyan had also stated that some 5 000 Armenians were killed during the war 244 Also the Armenian authorities had stated that about 60 Armenian servicemen were captured by Azerbaijan as prisoners of war 81 The former Head of the Military Control Service of the Armenian MoD Movses Hakobyan stated that already on the fifth day of war there were 1 500 deserters from Armenian armed forces who were kept in Karabakh and not allowed to return to Armenia in order to prevent panic The press secretary of Armenian prime minister called the accusations absurd and asked the law enforcement agencies to deal with them 245 Former military commissar of Armenia major general Levon Stepanyan stated that the number of deserters in Armenian army was over 10 000 and it is not possible to prosecute such a large number of military personnel 246 During the post war clashes the Armenian government stated that 60 servicemen went missing 247 including several dozen that were captured 248 and On 27 October 2020 Artsakh authorities stated that its defence minister Jalal Harutyunyan was wounded in action 249 However unofficial Azerbaijani military sources alleged that he was killed and released footage apparently showing the assassination from a drone camera 250 During the conflict the government of Azerbaijan did not reveal the number of its military casualties 251 On 11 January Azerbaijan stated that 2 853 of its soldiers had been killed during the war while another 50 went missing 59 Also Azerbaijani authorities stated that 11 more Azerbaijani servicemen were killed during the post war clashes or landmine explosions 252 253 254 On 23 October 2020 President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev confirmed that Shukur Hamidov who was made National Hero of Azerbaijan in 2016 was killed during the operations in Qubadli District 255 This was the first military casualty officially confirmed by the government However Armenian and Artsakh authorities have claimed 7 630 Azerbaijani soldiers and Syrian mercenaries were killed 256 257 The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights documented the death of at least 541 Syrian fighters or mercenaries fighting for Azerbaijan 60 On 14 November 2020 the Observatory reported the death of a commander of the Syrian National Army s Hamza Division 258 Infrastructure damage The Armenian Apostolic Ghazanchetsots Cathedral in Shusha was shelled twice during the conflict 259 260 261 Azerbaijani authorities had stated that about four thousand civilian objects were damaged in the territory of the Tartar District as a result of the bombardment of the district 262 263 Civilian areas including major cities have been hit including Azerbaijan s second largest city Ganja and the region s capital Stepanakert with many buildings and homes destroyed 264 265 The Ghazanchetsots Cathedral has also been damaged 266 Several outlets reported increased cases of COVID 19 in Nagorno Karabakh particularly the city of Stepanakert where the population was forced to live in overcrowded bunkers due to Azerbaijan artillery and drone strikes conflict 267 268 There were also reported difficulties in testing and contact tracing during the conflict 267 268 The Ghazanchetsots Cathedral in Shusha became damaged as a result of shelling On 19 October 2020 a strong fire broke out in a cotton plant in Azad Qaraqoyunlu Tartar District as a result of the Armenian artillery shelling with several large hangars of the plant becoming completely burned down 269 An Armenian backed Nagorno Karabakh human rights ombudsman report noted 5 800 private properties and 520 private vehicles destroyed with damage to 960 items of civilian infrastructure and industrial and public and objects 270 On 16 November 2020 the Prosecutor General s Office of the Republic of Azerbaijan reported 3 410 private houses 512 civilian facilities and 120 multi storey residential buildings being damaged throughout the war 82 Equipment losses By 7 October 2020 Azerbaijan reported to have destroyed about 250 tanks and other armoured vehicles 150 other military vehicles 11 command and command observation posts 270 artillery units and MLRSs including a BM 27 Uragan 60 Armenian anti aircraft systems including 4 S 300 and 25 9K33 Osas 18 UAVs and 8 arms depots 243 271 272 273 destroyed As of 16 October 2020 the Azerbaijani President stated that the Armenian losses were at US 2 billion 274 In turn an Azerbaijani helicopter was stated to have been damaged but its crew had apparently returned it to Azerbaijani controlled territory without casualties 275 Later it was reported that on 12 October 2020 Azerbaijan had destroyed one Tochka U missile launcher On 14 October 2020 Azerbaijan stated it had further destroyed five T 72 tanks three BM 21 Grad rocket launchers one 9K33 Osa missile system one BMP 2 vehicle one KS 19 air defence gun two D 30 howitzers and several Armenian army automobiles 276 On the same day Azerbaijan announced the destruction of three R 17 Elbrus tactical ballistic missile launchers that had been targeting Ganja and Mingachevir 277 BBC reporters confirmed the destruction of at least one tactical ballistic missile launcher in the vicinity of Vardenis close to the border with Azerbaijan and posted photo evidence in support of this information 278 Later American journalist Josh Friedman posted a high quality video of a destroyed Armenian ballistic missile launcher 279 Armenian and Artsakh authorities initially reported the downing of four Azerbaijani helicopters and the destruction of ten tanks and IFVs as well as 15 drones 280 Later the numbers were revised to 36 tanks and armoured personnel vehicles destroyed two armoured combat engineering vehicles destroyed and four helicopters and 27 unmanned aerial vehicles downed all within the first day of hostilities 281 They released footage showing the destruction or damage of five Azerbaijani tanks 282 Over the course of 2 October the Artsakh Defence Army said they had destroyed 39 Azerbaijani military vehicles including a T 90 tank four SU 25 fighter bombers three Mi 24 attack helicopters and 17 UAVs 283 According to Dutch warfare research group Oryx which documents visually confirmed losses on both sides Armenia lost 255 tanks destroyed 146 damaged 6 captured 103 78 armoured fighting vehicles destroyed 25 damaged 1 captured 52 and 737 trucks vehicles and jeeps destroyed 331 damaged 18 captured 387 while Azerbaijan lost 62 tanks destroyed 38 damaged 16 abandoned 1 captured 7 captured but later lost 1 23 armoured fighting vehicles destroyed 6 damaged 3 abandoned 7 captured 9 76 trucks vehicles and jeeps destroyed 40 damaged 22 abandoned 8 captured 6 as well 11 old An 2 aircraft used as unmanned bait in order for Armenia to reveal the location of air defence systems Oryx only counts destroyed vehicles and equipment of which photo or videographic evidence is available and therefore the actual number of equipment destroyed is higher 284 Suspected war crimesUN Secretary General Antonio Guterres stated that indiscriminate attacks on populated areas anywhere including in Stepanakert Ganja and other localities in and around the immediate Nagorno Karabakh zone of conflict were totally unacceptable 285 Amnesty International stated that both Azerbaijani and Armenian forces committed war crimes during recent fighting in Nagorno Karabakh and called on Azerbaijani and Armenian authorities to immediately conduct independent impartial investigations identify all those responsible and bring them to justice 286 287 Azerbaijan started an investigation on war crimes by Azerbaijani servicemen in November 288 and as of 14 December has arrested four of its servicemen 289 Armenian The Armenian forces had shelled the town of Shikharkh damaging apartments and schools 290 The town was built for the Azerbaijani refugees of the First Nagorno Karabakh war 291 Armenia struck several Azerbaijani cities outside of the conflict zone most frequently Tartar Beylagan and Barda 292 293 Attacks reported by Azerbaijani authorities included an attack on Beylagan on 4 October killing two civilians and injuring 2 others 294 295 Goranboy on 8 October killing a civilian 296 Hadrut on 10 October seriously injuring a medical worker 297 Fuzuli on 20 October resulting in one civilian death and six injuries 298 299 Tartar on 20 October resulting in two civilian deaths and one civilian injury 300 and Tartar on 10 November resulting in one civilian injury 301 By 9 November there had been more than 93 civilian deaths and 416 civilian injuries in areas of Azerbaijan outside of the war zone 184 302 Human Rights Watch reported that on 27 September the Armenian forces had launched an artillery attack on Qasalti of Goranboy District killing five members of the Gurbanov family and damaged several homes Human Rights Watch examined the severely damaged house and found several munition remnants in the courtyard that were consistent with fragments of large caliber artillery It also reported that the Armenian forces struck Hacimemmedli of Aghdam District on 1 October in an agricultural area at around 11 00 killing two civilians HRW stated that they had found no evident military objectives during their visit to the village HRW also reported that the Armenian forces had launched an artillery attack on 4 October in Tap Qaraqoyunlu of Goranboy District at about 16 30 wounding a civilian Then on 5 October Human Rights Watch reported that the Armenian forces fired a munition that landed in a field about 500 meters from Babi of Fuzuli District The Azerbaijani authorities stated that they had identified the munition as a Scud B ballistic missile and measured the crater as 15 meters in diameter 290 Armenian forces heavily shelled the district of Tartar during the war starting from 28 September The bombardment caused widespread destruction and many civilian deaths 303 262 Thousands of people became refugees making the city of Tartar a ghost town 304 and fled to neighbouring cities such as Barda 305 306 307 The Azerbaijani authorities stated that the Armenian forces had fired 15 500 shells on the territory of Tartar District until 29 October with over 2 000 shells being fired upon Tartar in some days Official Azerbaijani figures show that over a thousand civilian objects including schools hospitals and government buildings were either damaged or destroyed during the bombardment 262 Human Rights Watch confirmed many of the targeted attacks on civilians and civilian objects such as kindergartens and hospitals by the Armenian forces It also stated that the Armenian military forces had carried out unlawfully indiscriminate rocket and missile strikes on the Azerbaijani territories and that such indiscriminate attacks were war crimes 308 The constant bombardment of the city prompted the Azerbaijani to label Tartar as the Stalingrad of Azerbaijan 309 and the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev accused Armenia of trying to turn Tartar to the next Aghdam also referred to as the Hiroshima of the Caucasus by the locals 310 311 Turkey also condemned the Armenian shelling of a cemetery in Tartar during a funeral ceremony 312 which foreign journalists at scene and Human Rights Watch confirmed 313 308 On 29 October the head of the Tartar District Executive Power Mustagim Mammadov stated that during the war 17 civilians killed and 61 people injured in Tartar District as a result of the bombardment in Tartar According to him in total about 1 200 people suffered from the bombardment 262 The Azerbaijani authorities reported two more civilian injuries later on Destruction in Tartar after the Armenian bombardment External video Azerbaijan footage shows shelling in city of Ganja on YouTubeBetween 4 and 17 October four separate missile attacks on the city of Ganja killed 32 civilians 290 including a 13 year old Russian citizen 88 and injured 125 314 315 316 317 with women and children among the victims 317 The attacks were condemned by the European Union 318 and Azerbaijani authorities accused the Armenian Armed Forces of committing war crimes through the firing of ballistic missiles at civilian settlements calling the third attack an act of genocide 319 320 321 Armenia denied responsibility for the attacks 322 317 The Artsakh Defence Army confirmed responsibility for the first attack but denied targeting residential areas claiming that it had fired at military targets especially Ganja International Airport 323 324 Subsequently both a correspondent reporting from the scene for a Russian media outlet and the airport director denied that the airport had been hit 325 while a BBC News journalist Orla Guerin visited the scene and found no evidence of any military target there 326 On 15 October the Armenian forces shelled a cemetery 400 metres 1 300 ft north of the city of Tartar during a funeral ceremony killing 4 civilians and injuring 4 more 327 This was confirmed by local journalists 328 Dozhd 313 and the Human Rights Watch 308 The Presidential Administration of Azerbaijan also confirmed that the cemetery was shelled in the morning 329 On 25 October a video emerged online of an Armenian teenager in civilian clothing helping soldiers fire artillery on Azerbaijani positions Azerbaijan subsequently accused Armenia of using child soldiers 330 331 One day later the Artsakh ombudsman released a statement claiming that the boy in the video was 16 was not directly engaged in military actions and was working with his father 332 The Human Rights Watch reported that on 28 October at about 17 00 the Armenian forces fired a munition on Tap Qaraqoyunlu of Goranboy District that produced fragmentation and killed a civilian 290 The Artsakh Defence Army hit the Azerbaijani town of Barda with missiles twice on 27 and 28 October 2020 resulting in the deaths of 26 civilians and injuring over 83 making it the deadliest attack of the conflict 333 334 335 The casualties included a 39 year old Red Crescent volunteer while two other volunteers were injured 336 Civilian infrastructure and vehicles were extensively damaged 337 Armenia denied responsibility 338 but Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch stated that Armenia had fired or intentionally supplied Artsakh with the cluster munitions and Smerch rockets used in the attack 339 340 Artsakh acknowledged responsibility but said it was targeting military facilities 341 Marie Struthers Amnesty International s Regional Director for Eastern Europe and Central Asia said that the firing of cluster munitions into civilian areas is cruel and reckless and causes untold death injury and misery 342 The Azerbaijani ombudsman called the attack a terrorist act against civilians 343 The use of cluster munitions was also reported by The New York Times 344 On 7 November according to Human Rights Watch the Armenian forces fired a rocket that struck an agricultural field near the village of Eyrice and killed a 16 year old boy while he playing with other children Azerbaijani authorities stated that they had identified the munition as a 9M528 Smerch rocket which carries a warhead that produces blast and fragmentation effect HRW reported that the researchers did not observe any military objectives in the area 290 On 30 October 2020 Human Rights Watch reported that Armenia or Artsakh forces used cluster munition and stated that Armenia should immediately cease using cluster munitions or supplying them to Nagorno Karabakh forces 160 Destruction in Ganja after the Armenian missile attacks on the city In mid November a video of a wounded Azerbaijani soldier Amin Musayev receiving first aid by Ukrainian journalist Alexander Kharchenko and Armenian soldiers after the ceasefire came into force was spread on social media platforms Following this a video was released showing Musayev being abused inside a vehicle It is reported that he was lying on the ground in the car and asked where are we going In response the alleged Armenian soldier said If you behave well go home and cursed after which it became clear that the Azerbaijani soldier had been kicked On 18 November a representative of the International Committee of the Red Cross ICRC in Yerevan said that information about this person was being investigated The ICRC s representative in Yerevan Zara Amatuni declined to say whether she had any information about Musayev The Artsakh ombudsman said he had no information about the Azerbaijani soldier but that if he was injured he was probably in hospital in Armenia The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said in a statement that the issue was being investigated and will be reported to the relevant international organisations According to the ministry the information about the torture of prisoners is first checked for accuracy and brought to the attention of relevant international organizations 345 346 On 25 November ICRC s representatives visited Musayev and Karimov in Yerevan 347 On 5 December the family of Musayev was informed of his condition through ICRC According to a reported copy of the letter sent by Musayev he stated that his condition was well 345 Musayev was returned to Azerbaijan on 15 December as part of the POW exchange deal 348 Azerbaijan had officially accused the Armenian side of ill treating the Azerbaijani POWs 349 Several Azerbaijani POWs in interviews with the Azerbaijani media outlets had stated that they were tortured by their Armenian captors until being transferred back to Azerbaijan 350 351 352 Dilgam Asgarov a Russian citizen of Azerbaijani descent who was detained by the Armenian allied forces alongside Shahbaz Guliyev an Azerbaijani citizen in 2014 during an incident in Kalbajar 353 in an interview to Virtual Azerbaycan newspaper he gave after being released also stated that the Armenian captors had tortured the Azerbaijani POWs 354 On 10 December Amnesty International released a report on videos depicting war crimes In one of the videos the Armenian soldiers were seen cutting the throat of an Azerbaijani captive The captive appears to be lying on the ground whilst gagged and bound when an Armenian soldier approaches him and sticks a knife into his throat Independent pathological analysis confirmed that the wound sustained led to his death in minutes Eleven other videos showing inhumane treatment and outrages upon personal dignity of Azerbaijani captives by the Armenian army has come to light In several videos Armenian soldiers are seen cutting the ear off a dead Azerbaijani soldier dragging a dead Azerbaijani soldier across the ground by a rope tied around his feet and standing on the corpse of a dead Azerbaijani soldier 286 287 On 11 December Human Rights Watch released an extensive report about Armenia s unlawful rocket strikes on Azerbaijani civilian areas The report investigated 18 separate strikes which killed 40 civilians and wounded dozens more During on site investigations in Azerbaijan in November Human Rights Watch documented 11 incidents in which Armenian forces used ballistic missiles unguided artillery rockets large calibre artillery projectiles and cluster munitions that hit populated areas in apparently indiscriminate attacks In at least four other cases munitions struck civilians or civilian objects in areas where there were no apparent military targets In addition to causing civilian casualties the Armenian attacks damaged homes businesses schools and a health clinic and contributed to mass displacement It acknowledged the presence of military forces in two cities and two villages attacked by Armenian forces claiming that Azerbaijan had unnecessarily put civilians at risk however it also stated that the presence of military targets did not excuse the use of inherently inaccurate weaponry with a large destructive radius in populated areas by Armenian forces Human Rights Watch called the Armenian government to conduct transparent investigations into attacks by Armenian forces that violate international humanitarian law or the laws of war 290 On 15 December Human Rights Watch released another report about Armenia s use of cluster munitions in multiple attacks on Azerbaijani civilian areas Its researchers documented four attacks with cluster munitions in three of the country s districts Barda Goranboy and Tartar which killed at least seven civilians including two children and wounded close to 20 including two children Human Rights Watch also stated that as Nagorno Karabakh forces do not possess cluster munitions it is likely that Armenian forces carried out the attacks or supplied the munitions to Nagorno Karabakh forces 355 Azerbaijani See also Armenian prisoners of the Second Nagorno Karabakh War source source source source source source source source source source source source Camera footage of Azerbaijan s use of cluster munition on Stepanakert during a shelling on 4 October 2020 source source source source source source source source source source source source Stepanakert after the shelling on 4 October 2020 On 4 October 2020 the Armenian government stated Azerbaijan had deployed cluster munitions against residential targets in Stepanakert an Amnesty International investigator condemned this 356 In an Amnesty International report the cluster bombs were identified as Israeli made M095 DPICM cluster munitions that appear to have been fired by Azerbaijani forces 357 The next day Armenian Minister of Foreign Affairs Zohrab Mnatsakanyan stated to Fox News that the targeting of civilian populations in Nagorno Karabakh by Azerbaijani forces was tantamount to war crimes and called for an end to the aggression 358 In November 2020 Aliyev denied using cluster munitions against civilian areas in Stepanakert on the 1 2 and 3 October 2020 in an interview with BBC News journalist Orla Guerin describing as fake news the statements of other BBC reporters who witnessed the attacks and described them as indiscriminate shelling of a town without clear military targets 359 During an on site investigation in Nagorno Karabakh in October 2020 Human Rights Watch documented four incidents in which Azerbaijan used Israeli supplied cluster munitions against civilian areas of Nagorno Karabakh The HRW investigation team stated that they did not find any sort of military sites in the residential neighbourhoods where the cluster munitions were used and condemned its use against civilian populated areas Stephen Goose arms division director at Human Rights Watch and chair of the Cluster Munition Coalition stated that the continued use of cluster munitions particularly in populated areas shows flagrant disregard for the safety of civilians He then added that the repeated use of cluster munitions by Azerbaijan should cease immediately as their continued use serves to heighten the danger for civilians for years to come The HRW investigation team also noted that numerous civilian buildings and infrastructure were heavily damaged due to shelling 360 On 16 December Human Rights Watch published a report about two separate attacks hours apart on the Ghazanchetsots Cathedral on 8 October in the town of Shusha known to Armenians as Shushi suggesting that the church a civilian object with cultural significance was an intentional target despite the absence of evidence that it was used for military purposes The weapon remnants Human Rights Watch collected at the site corroborate the use of guided munitions The two strikes on the church the second one while journalists and other civilians had gathered at the site appear to be deliberate said Hugh Williamson Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch These attacks should be impartially investigated and those responsible held to account 361 Destroyed housing complex after the Azerbaijani bombardment of Stepanakert On 15 October 2020 a video surfaced of two captured Armenians being executed by Azerbaijani soldiers 362 Artsakh authorities identified one as a civilian 363 Bellingcat analysed the videos and concluded that the footage was real and that both executed were Armenian combatants captured by Azerbaijani forces between 9 and 15 October 2020 and later executed 362 The BBC also investigated the videos and confirmed that the videos were from Hadrut and were filmed some time between 9 15 October 2020 A probe has been launched by Armenia s human rights defender Arman Tatoyan who shared the videos with European Court of Human Rights and who will also show the videos to the UN human rights commissioner the Council of Europe and other international organisations 364 The U N human rights chief Michelle Bachelet stated that in depth investigations by media organisations into videos that appeared to show Azerbaijani troops summarily executing two captured Armenians in military uniforms uncovered compelling and deeply disturbing information 365 On 10 December Amnesty International released a report on videos depicting war crimes from both sides In some of these videos Azerbaijani soldiers were seen decapitating the head of an Armenian soldier as he was alive In another video the victim is an older man in civilian clothes who gets his throat cut before the video abruptly ends 286 Beheadings of two elderly ethnic Armenian Civilians by Azerbaijani armed forces have been identified by The Guardian In videos posted online on 22 November and 3 December men in Azerbaijani military uniforms hold down and decapitate a man using a knife One then places the severed head on a dead animal This is how we get revenge by cutting off heads a voice says off camera The victim was identified as Genadi Petrosyan 69 who had moved to Matadashen in the late 1980s from Sumgait Another video posted on 7 December showed two soldiers in Azerbaijani military uniforms pinning down an elderly man near a tree Another soldier passes a knife to one of the attackers who begins slicing at the victim s neck The victim was identified as Yuri Asryan a reclusive 82 year old who had refused to leave his village Azokh 366 In another video a villager named Kamo Manasyan is kicked and beaten as blood streams from his right eye and then hit with a rifle stock 366 External video Nagorno Karabakh hospital hit by shelling on YouTubeOn 16 October according to Armenia s ombudsman report an Azerbaijani serviceman had called the brother of an Armenian soldier from the latter s phone number saying that his brother was with them and that they had beheaded him and were going to post his photos on the internet according to Armenian sources they did post the image online 367 The Humanitarian Aid Relief Trust included the beheading of an Armenian soldier in their reporting 368 Protesters in Geneva demand the release of Armenian POWs 15 April 2021 In early November Armenia applied to European Convention on Human Rights over the videos of the brutal treatment of the bodies of Armenian POWs which were spread on the social network 369 On 23 November ECHR announced that it applies urgent measures in case of Armenian POWs and civilians held in Azerbaijan 370 Michael Rubin of the Washington Examiner referring to the beheadings the torture and mutilations of POWs stated that in contrast to Aliyev s reassurance of ethnic Armenians on remaining as residents of Azerbaijan the actions of the Azerbaijani servicemen tell a different story 371 Human Rights Watch reported about the videos depicting physical abuse and humiliation of Armenian POWs by their Azerbaijani captors adding that the most of the captors did not fear being held accountable as their faces were visible in the videos 111 HRW spoke with the families of some of the POWs in the videos who provided photographs and other documents establishing their identity and confirmed that these relatives were serving either in the Artsakh Defence Army or the Armenian armed forces 111 Artsakhi residents try to remove car tires from a burning car shop after shelling by Azerbaijan s artillery A criminal case was opened in Azerbaijan over the Armenian POWs videos with the country s Prosecutor General s Office stating that inhuman treatment could result in the criminal prosecution of some soldiers serving in the Azerbaijani Armed Forces It also stated that many of these videos were fake 288 On 14 December the Azerbaijani security forces arrested two Azerbaijani privates and two other warrant officers accused of insulting the bodies of the Armenian servicemen and gravestones belonging to Armenians 372 The Azerbaijani human rights activists considered the government reaction to the suspected war crimes to be adequate although some Azerbaijani social media users argued about whether their persecution was justified also criticising Armenia not investigating its suspected war crimes 373 On 19 March 2021 Human Rights Watch published a report regarding Armenian prisoners of war abused by Azerbaijani forces subjecting them to cruel and degrading treatment and torture either when they were captured during their transfer or while in custody at various detention facilities Hugh Williamson Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch named these actions by Azerbaijani forces abhorrent and a war crime 110 On 3 May 2021 Artak Zeynalyan reported that Azerbaijani servicemen tortured and killed 19 Armenian POWs which is a war crime The list of 19 killed includes 12 civilians and seven servicemen 374 According to Human Rights Defender of Armenia Arman Tatoyan the study of the collected videos and photos shows that the tortures cruelties and inhuman treatment by the Azerbaijani Armed Forces against Armenian POWs have been committed with motives of ethnic hatred 375 White phosphorus use allegations In late October and early November Azerbaijan accused the Armenian forces of using white phosphorus on civilian areas 376 377 Then on 4 November Azerbaijan National Agency for Mine Action ANAMA reported finding unexploded white phosphorus munitions in Sehlebad near Tartar which according to Azerbaijan were fired by the Armenian forces 378 379 Azerbaijani authorities claimed the Armenian forces were transporting white phosphorus into the region 380 On 20 November Prosecutor General s Office of Azerbaijan filed a lawsuit accusing the Armenian Armed Forces of using phosphorus ammunition in Nagorno Karabakh as well as in Tartar District and chemical munitions to inflict large scale and long term harm to the environment in Fuzuli and Tartar Districts as well as around Shusha 381 On 30 October Armenian and Artsakh authorities had accused the Azerbaijani forces of using phosphorus to burn forests near Shusha 382 383 This was supported by Ecocide alert from 51 non governmental organisations under the auspices of Transparency International 384 France 24 reported that Azerbaijan could have used white phosphorus during the war highlighting that its use is strictly regulated under an international agreement that neither Azerbaijan nor Armenia have signed 385 A reporter of The Independent who visited the National Burns Centre in Yerevan saw the soldiers burns which according to deputy director of the centre were consistent with white phosphorus damage in 80 cases 386 Patrick Knipper an orthopaedic surgeon and a specialist in severe burns at the Assistance Publique Hopitaux de Paris who was in Yerevan as part of a French assistance mission to help with the treatment of the injured arriving from the front provided the first independent confirmation of burns being the result of white phosphorus munition use to Le Point magazine highlighting the characteristic deep burns hypocalcaemia and sudden deaths in his conclusion 387 388 Azerbaijan denied using white phosphorus 389 Two interviewed Russian military experts did not find evidence provided by the Armenian side to be convincing and expressed their doubts that white phosphorus was used by either side of the conflict 390 391 However on 22 September 2021 the U S House of Representatives passed the Amendment calling for a report on Azerbaijani war crimes including the use of illegal munitions and white phosphorus against Armenian civilians 392 393 AftermathArmenia See also 2020 2021 Armenian protests 2021 Armenian political crisis and Armenian prisoners of the Second Nagorno Karabakh War Protests in Yerevan against the terms of a cease fire agreement on 18 November 2020 394 Shortly after the news about the signing the ceasefire agreement broke in the early hours of 10 November violent protests erupted in Armenia against Nikol Pashinyan claiming he was a traitor for having accepted the peace deal 395 Protesters also seized the parliament building by breaking a metal door and pulled the President of the National Assembly of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan from a car and beat him 396 397 Throughout November numerous Armenian officials resigned from their posts including the Armenian minister of foreign affairs Zohrab Mnatsakanyan 398 the minister of defence David Tonoyan 399 head of the same ministry s military control service Movses Hakobyan 400 and the spokesman of Armenia s Defense Ministry Artsrun Hovhannisyan 401 After the ceasefire agreement was signed President Armen Sarksyan held a meeting with Karekin II where they both made a call to declare 22 November as the Day of Remembrance of the Heroes who fell for the Defense of the Motherland in the Artsakh Liberation War 402 On 16 November he declared that snap parliamentary elections and Pashinyan s resignation were inevitable proposing that a process be overseen and managed by an interim National Accord Government 403 On 10 December the Armenian media reported that an Azerbaijani citizen was detained at night near Berdavan in Tavush Province It was reported that an Azerbaijani civilian was observed in Berdavan between 4 00 and 5 00 in the morning The executive head of Berdavan Smbat Mugdesyan said that the NSS had taken him away and that he did not know other details According to the Armenian media a criminal case was opened against the detained citizen on suspicion of illegally crossing to the Armenian state border The name of the detained Azerbaijani was not disclosed According to the BBC Azerbaijani Service Azerbaijan s Internal Affairs Foreign Affairs and Defence Ministries said they had no information about the incident 404 On 12 December Azerbaijani trucks accompanied by the International Committee of the Red Cross and Russian peacekeepers entered David Bek in Syunik Province of Armenia to pick up the bodies of fallen soldiers Armenian officials refuted the media reports of Azerbaijani vehicles entering Goris 405 On 16 December the family members of the missing Armenian soldiers gathered in front of the Armenian Ministry of Defence building demanding information about their loved ones They were not allowed into the building and Armenian military representatives did not give a response A scuffle ensued during which the family members of the missing Armenian soldiers broke through to the building 406 Azerbaijan Celebrations in Baku Azerbaijan after the peace treaty The peace agreement and the end of the war was seen as a victory and was widely celebrated in Azerbaijan 407 408 On 10 November 2020 crowds waved flags in Baku after the peace deal was announced 409 On 11 November the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev at a meeting with wounded Azerbaijani servicemen who took part in the war said that new orders and medals would be established in Azerbaijan and that he gave appropriate instructions on awarding civilians and servicemen who showed heroism on the battlefield and in the rear and distinguished themselves in this war He also proposed the names of these orders and medals 410 About a week later at a plenary session of the Azerbaijani National Assembly a draft law on amendments to the law On the establishment of orders and medals of the Republic of Azerbaijan was submitted for discussion 411 Seventeen new orders and medals were established on the same day in the first reading in accordance with the bill On the establishment of orders and medals of the Republic of Azerbaijan 412 In mid November Aliyev and Azerbaijan s First Vice president Mehriban Aliyeva visited Fuzuli and Jabrayil Districts both of which were ghost towns in ruins after the Armenian forces occupied it in 1993 413 Aliyev ordered the State Agency of Azerbaijan Automobile Roads to construct a new highway starting from Alxanli which will connect Fuzuli to Shusha 414 In Jabrayil Aliyev stated that a new master plan will be drawn up to rebuild the city 415 Azerbaijani Sukhoi Su 25 fighter jets during the victory parade in Baku on 10 December 27 September and 10 November were declared Memorial Day and Victory Day respectively 416 417 although the latter s date was changed to 8 November as it overlapped with Mustafa Kemal Ataturk s Memorial Day in Turkey 418 It was also announced that the new station in the Baku Metro will be named 8 November at the suggestion of Aliyev 419 On the same day President Aliyev signed a decree on the establishment of the YASHAT Foundation to support the families of those wounded and killed during the war and general control over the management of the foundation was transferred to the ASAN service 420 On 2 December the Association of Banks of Azerbaijan announced that the bank debts of servicemen and civilians killed during the war in Azerbaijan would be completely written off 421 On 4 December at 12 00 GMT 4 local time a moment of silence was held in Azerbaijan to commemorate the fallen soldiers of the war 422 423 Flags were lowered across the country and traffic halted while ships moored in the Bay of Baku as well as cars honked their horns 424 A unity prayer was held at the Heydar Mosque in Baku in memory of those killed in the war and Shaykh al Islam Allahshukur Pashazadeh chairman of the Religious Council of the Caucasus said that Sunnis and Shiites prayed for the souls of our martyrs together Commemoration ceremonies were also held in mosques in Sumgayit Guba Ganja Shamakhi Lankaran Shaki in churches in Baku and Ganja and in the synagogue of Ashkenazi Jews in Baku 425 On 9 December President Aliyev awarded 83 servicemen with the title of Hero of the Patriotic War 426 204 servicemen with Karabakh Order 427 and 33 servicemen with Zafar Order 428 A victory parade was held on 10 December in honour of the Azerbaijani victory on Azadliq Square 429 with 3 000 military servicemen who distinguished themselves during the war marched alongside military equipment unmanned aerial vehicles and aircraft 430 as well as Armenian war trophies 431 and Turkish soldiers and officers 432 Turkish President Erdogan attended the military parade as part of a state visit to Baku 433 In April 2021 Azerbaijan opened a Military Trophy Park featuring items from the conflict 434 According to peer reviewed journal Caucasus Survey 435 for the first time in the post Soviet era the Azerbaijani leadership has achieved a high degree of social solidarity All opposition parties and organizations including the Popular Front Musavat ReAl and National Council expressed their full support for the war The citizens acquired a shared emotional experience of making history The government received the stamp of approval from its most vicious critics The authoritarian government and the civil society it long persecuted were united in the name of homeland The definition of homeland consequently has been reduced to a military victory for the soil not values or the rights or lives of its people By supporting a war the government waged both the opposition and civil society contributed to the creation of a new source and reserve of legitimacy for authoritarianism Further while the opposition and civil society criticized the regime in Russia for its authoritarianism and imperialist nationalism the majority of them did not express misgivings about the no less authoritarian and imperialist politics of Turkey and enthusiastically embraced ultra right pan Turkism Transfer of territories and flight of Armenian population Russian peacekeepers and Azerbaijani military personnel near Dadivank of Kalbajar District Main article Armenian occupied territories surrounding Nagorno Karabakh 2020 war External video Nagorno Karabakh The families burning down their own homes on YouTubeThe Armenian population of the territories ceded to Azerbaijan was forced to flee to Armenia sometimes destroying their houses and livestock to keep them out of Azerbaijani hands 436 437 Turkish Russian peacekeeping Main article Peacekeeping operations in Nagorno Karabakh Post ceasefire clashes Main article 2021 2022 Armenia Azerbaijan border crisis Canada s boycott of arms exports to Turkey In 2020 Canada suspended arms exports to Turkey due to accusations of the use of Canadian technology in the conflict in violation of end use assurances Turkey had given to Canada Turkey criticised the Canadian decision 438 In 2021 Canada prohibited arms exports to Turkey after an investigation verified the accusations 439 Turkey protested that the embargo will harm bilateral relations and NATO alliance solidarity 440 AnalysisNationalist sentiment Further information Anti Armenian sentiment in Azerbaijan and Anti Azerbaijani sentiment in Armenia While Armenians and Azerbaijanis lived side by side under Soviet rule the collapse of the Soviet Union contributed to racialisation and fierce nationalism causing both Armenians and Azerbaijanis to stereotype each other shaping rhetoric on both sides 441 Before during and after the First Nagorno Karabakh War the growth of anti Armenian and anti Azerbaijan sentiment resulted in ethnic violence including pogroms against Armenians in Azerbaijan as in Sumgait and Baku 442 443 444 445 and against Azerbaijanis in Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh as at Gugark and Stepanakert 135 136 137 138 Azerbaijani aims Most of Azerbaijan s initial successful advances were concentrated in the areas located along the Aras River which has less mountainous terrain compared to the region s northern and central territories In a 27 September 2020 interview regional expert Thomas de Waal said that it was highly unlikely that hostilities were initiated by the Armenian side as they were already in possession of the disputed territory and were incentivised to normalise the status quo while for various reasons Azerbaijan calculate d that military action w ould win it something 446 The suspected immediate goal of the Azerbaijani offensive was to capture the districts of Fuzuli and Jabrayil in southern Nagorno Karabakh where the terrain is less mountainous and more favourable for offensive operations 97 Political scientist Arkady Dubnov of the Carnegie Moscow Center 447 448 believed that Azerbaijan had launched the offensive to improve Azerbaijan s position in a suitable season for hostilities in the terrain 449 Turkey and Russia The geostrategic interests of Russia and Turkey in the region were widely commented upon during the war 450 Both were described as benefiting from the ceasefire agreement with The Economist stating that for Russia China and Turkey all sides stand to benefit economically 451 In late October massed Russian airstrikes targeted a training camp for Failaq al Sham one of the largest Turkish backed Sunni Islamist rebel groups in Syria s Idlib province killing 78 militants in an act widely interpreted as a warning shot to Ankara over the latter s involvement in the Nagorno Karabakh fighting 452 453 Turkey Azerbaijan and Turkey are bound by ethnic cultural and historic ties and both countries refer to their relationship as being one between two states one nation 454 Turkey then the Ottoman Empire helped Azerbaijan previously part of the Russian Empire gain its independence in 1918 and became the first country to recognise Azerbaijan s independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 455 Turkey has also been the guarantor of the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic an exclave of Azerbaijan since 1921 456 457 Other commentators have seen Turkey s support for Azerbaijan as part of an activist foreign policy linking it with neo Ottoman policies in Syria Iraq and the Eastern Mediterranean 458 459 Turkey s highly visible role in the conflict was described by Armenians as a continuation of the Armenian genocide the mass murder and expulsion of 1 5 million Armenians by the Ottoman government particularly given Turkey s continued denial of the genocide 460 461 462 463 Turkey provided military support to Azerbaijan including military experts and Syrian mercenaries 451 The transport communications stipulated by the ceasefire agreement linking Nakhchivan and the main part of Azerbaijan through Armenia would provide Turkey with trade access to Central Asia and China s Belt and Road Initiative 451 Russia Russia had sought to maintain good relations with Azerbaijan and had sold weapons to both parties Even prior to the war Russia had possessed a military base in Armenia as part of a military alliance with Armenia and thus was obligated by treaty to defend Armenia in the case of a war Like in Syria and in Libya s ongoing civil war Russia and NATO member Turkey therefore had opposing interests 464 Turkey appeared to use the conflict to attempt to leverage its influence in the South Caucasus along its eastern border using both military and diplomatic resources to extend its sphere of influence in the Middle East and to marginalise the influence of Russia another regional power 465 466 Russia had historically pursued a policy of maintaining neutrality in the conflict and Armenia never formally requested aid 96 According to the director of the Russia studies program at the CNA at the beginning of the war Russia was judged to be unlikely to intervene militarily unless Armenia incurred drastic losses 96 The Russian MoFA also released a statement saying that Russia will provide Armenia with all the necessary assistance if the war continued on the territories of Armenia as both countries are part of the Collective Security Treaty Organization 467 468 Nonetheless when the Azerbaijani forces reportedly struck the Armenian territories on 14 October 2020 Russia did not directly interfere in the conflict 469 In a piece published by the Russian broadsheet Vedomosti on 10 November Konstantin Makienko a member of the State Duma Defence Committee wrote that the geopolitical consequences of the war were catastrophic not only for Armenia but for Russia as well because Moscow s influence in the Southern Caucasus had dwindled while the prestige of a successful and feisty Turkey contrariwise had increased immensely 470 Alexander Gabuev of the Carnegie Moscow Center took the opposite view describing the peace agreement as a win for Russia as it had prevented the conclusive defeat of Nagorno Karabakh and by placing Russia in charge of the strategic Lachin corridor boosted the country s leverage in the region 471 The relative success of Azerbaijan in meeting its strategic goals to gain control over Nagorno Karabakh via the use of military force may have influenced the Russian decision to invade Ukraine in 2022 472 Military tactics Bayraktar TB2 at 2020 Baku Victory Parade Bayraktar TB2 drones were used extensively by Azerbaijani forces during the war Azerbaijan s oil wealth allowed a consistently higher military budget than Armenia 451 and it purchased advanced weapons systems from Israel Russia and Turkey 155 Despite the similar size of both militaries Azerbaijan possessed superior tanks armoured personnel carriers and infantry fighting vehicles 158 and had also amassed a fleet of Turkish and Israeli drones Armenia built its own drones but these were greatly inferior to the Turkish and Israeli drones owned by Azerbaijan 158 Azerbaijan had a quantitative advantage in artillery systems particularly self propelled guns and long range multiple rocket launchers while Armenia had a minor advantage in tactical ballistic missiles 46 Because of the air defence systems of both sides there was little use of manned aviation during the conflict 158 In the opinion of military analyst Michael Kofman Director of the Russia Studies Program at the CNA and a Fellow at the Kennan Institute Azerbaijan deployed mercenaries from Syria to minimise Azeri troop casualties They took quite a few casualties early on especially in the south east and these mercenaries were essentially used as expendable assault troops to go in the first wave They calculated quite cynically that if it turned out these offensives were not successful early on then it was best these casualties would be among mercenaries not Azerbaijani forces 4 According to Gustav Gressel a Senior Policy Fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations the Armenian Army was superior to the Azerbaijani Army on a tactical level with better officers more agile leadership and higher motivation in soldiers but these were overcome by Azerbaijan s innovative use of drones to discover Armenian forward and reserve positions followed by conventional artillery and ballistic missiles to isolate and destroy Armenian forces 166 Gressel argues that European militaries are not better prepared for anti drone warfare than Armenia s with only France and Germany having some limited jamming capabilities and warns that a lack of gun based self propelled air defence systems and radar systems capable of tracking drones using plot fusion of several radar echoes makes European forces extremely vulnerable to loitering munitions and small drones 166 In the opinion of a Forbes magazine contributor Azerbaijan managed to inflict a devastating and decisive defeat through adept usage of sophisticated military hardware which avoided bogging down in a costly war of attrition According to Forbes Azerbaijan had prepared itself for tomorrow s war rather than a repeat of yesterday s war 473 The International Institute for Strategic Studies presented a summary of analyses by Russian military experts who concluded that the Azerbaijani victory was not just a result of drone warfare and Turkish assistance but could actually be attributed to a number of other factors such as a more professional army with recent battlefield experience employment by Armenia of Soviet era tactics against the modern warfare waged by Azerbaijan a strong national will to fight on part of Azerbaijan compared to irresolute Armenian leadership and the Armenians believing their own propaganda and underestimating the enemy 474 In the opinion voiced by Russian military expert Vladimir Yevseev after the war for unclear reasons Armenia appeared not to have executed the mobilisation it had announced and hardly any mobilised personnel were deployed to the conflict area 475 Drone warfare The Baku Tbilisi Ceyhan pipeline green is one of several pipelines running from Baku Azerbaijan made devastating use of drones and sensors demonstrating what The Economist described as a new more affordable type of air power 155 Azerbaijani drones notably the Turkish made Bayraktar TB2 carried out precise strikes as well as reconnaissance relaying the coordinates of targets to Azerbaijani artillery 100 Commentators noted how drones enabled small countries to conduct effective air campaigns potentially making low level conflicts much more deadly 476 Close air support was provided by specialised suicide drones such as the Israeli made IAI Harop loitering munition rendering tanks vulnerable and suggesting the need for changes to armoured warfare doctrine 477 Another suicide drone the Turkish made STM Kargu was also reportedly used by Azerbaijan 478 65 Targeting of pipelines Concerns were raised about the security of the petroleum industry in Azerbaijan 479 480 Azerbaijan claimed that Armenia targeted or tried to target the Baku Tbilisi Ceyhan pipeline which accounted for around 80 of country s oil exports and the Baku Novorossiysk pipeline 481 482 483 Armenia rejected the accusations 484 Use of propaganda Billboards in Yerevan began displaying footage released by the Armenian Ministry of Defence at the beginning of the conflict See also State sponsored Internet propaganda Both sides engaged in extensive propaganda campaigns through official mainstream and social media accounts magnified online 101 including in Russian media Video from drones recording their kills was used in highly effective Azerbaijani propaganda 100 155 In Baku digital billboards broadcast high resolution footage of missiles striking Armenian soldiers tanks and materiel Azerbaijan s President Ilham Aliyev told Turkish television that Azerbaijani operated drones had reduced the number of Azerbaijan s casualties stating These drones show Turkey s strength and empower Azerbaijanis 158 Cyberwarfare Hackers from Armenia and Azerbaijan as well as their allied countries have waged cyberwarfare with Azerbaijani hackers targeting Armenian websites and posting Aliyev s statements 485 and Greek hackers targeting Azerbaijani governmental websites 486 There have been coordinated messages posted from both sides Misinformation and videos of older events and other conflicts have been shared as new New social media accounts posting about Armenia and Azerbaijan have spiked with many from authentic users but many inauthentic also 487 488 Official statementsArmenia and Artsakh On 27 September 2020 the Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan accused the Azerbaijani authorities of a large scale provocation The Prime Minister stated that the recent aggressive statements of the Azerbaijani leadership large scale joint military exercises with Turkey as well as the rejection of OSCE proposals for monitoring indicated that the aggression was pre planned and constituted a major violation of regional peace and security 489 The next day Armenia s Ministry of Foreign Affairs MoFA issued a statement noting that the people of Artsakh were at war with the Turkish Azerbaijani alliance 490 The same day the Armenian ambassador to Russia Vardan Toganyan did not rule out that Armenia may turn to Russia for fresh arms supplies 491 On 29 September 2020 Prime Minister Pashinyan stated that Azerbaijan with military support from Turkey was expanding the theatre into Armenian territory 492 On 30 September 2020 Pashinyan stated that Armenia was considering officially recognising the Republic of Artsakh as an independent territory 493 The same day the Armenian MoFA stated that the Turkish Air Force had carried out provocative flights along the front between the forces of the Republic of Artsakh and Azerbaijan including providing air support to the Azerbaijani army 494 On 1 October 2020 the President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan stated that Armenians needed to prepare for a long term war 495 Two days later the Nagorno Karabakh Artsakh Foreign Ministry called on the international community to recognise the independence of the Republic of Artsakh in order to restore regional peace and security 496 On 6 October 2020 the Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan stated that the Armenian side was prepared to make concessions if Azerbaijan was ready to reciprocate 497 On 9 October 2020 Armen Sarkissian demanded that international powers particularly the United States Russia and NATO do more to stop Turkey s involvement in the war and warned that Ankara is creating another Syria in the Caucasus 498 On 21 October 2020 Nikol Pashinyan stated that it is impossible to talk about a diplomatic solution at this stage at least at this stage since the compromise option is not acceptable for Azerbaijan while the Armenian side stated many times that it is ready to resolve the issue through compromises Pashinyan said that to fight for the rights of our people means first of all to take up arms and commit to the protection of the rights of the homeland 499 On 12 November 2020 Pashinyan addressed his nation saying that Armenia and the Armenian people are living extremely difficult days There is sorrow in the hearts of all of us tears in the eyes of all of us pain in the souls of all of us The prime minister pointed out that the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Armenia reported that the war must be stopped immediately And the President of Artsakh warned that if the hostilities do not stop Stepanakert could be lost in days Pashinyan also stated that the Karabakh issue was not resolved and is not resolved and that the international recognition of the Artsakh Republic is becoming an absolute priority 500 Azerbaijan Meeting of the Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev with the country s Security Council on 27 September 2020 According to the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence the Armenian military violated the ceasefire 48 times along the line of contact on 26 September 2020 the day before the conflict Azerbaijan stated that the Armenian side attacked first prompting an Azerbaijani counter offensive 501 On 27 September 2020 Azerbaijan accused Armenian forces of a willful and deliberate attack on the front line 502 and of targeting civilian areas alleging a gross violation of international humanitarian law 503 On 28 September 2020 it stated that Armenia s actions had destroyed the peace negotiations through an act of aggression 504 alleged that a war had been launched against Azerbaijan mobilised the people of Azerbaijan and declared a Great Patriotic War 505 It then stated that the deployment of the Armenian military in Nagorno Karabakh constituted a threat to regional peace and accused Armenia of propagandising adding that the Azerbaijani military was operating according to international law 506 The Azerbaijani authorities issued a statement accusing the Armenian military of purposefully targeting civilians including women and children 507 The Azerbaijani Minister of Foreign Affairs MoFA denied any reports of Turkish involvement while admitting military technical cooperation with Turkey and other countries 508 On 29 September 2020 the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev said that Armenian control of the area and aggression had led to the destruction of infrastructure and mosques caused the Khojaly massacre and resulted in cultural genocide and was tantamount to state backed Islamophobia and anti Azerbaijani sentiment 509 The Azerbaijani MoFA demanded that Armenia stop shelling civilians and called on international organisations to ensure Armenia followed international law 510 Azerbaijan denied reports of mercenaries brought in from Turkey by Azerbaijan 511 512 and the First Vice president of the Republic of Azerbaijan Mehriban Aliyeva stated that Azerbaijan had never laid claim to others territory nor committed crimes against humanity 513 On 3 October 2020 Aliyev stated that Armenia needed to leave Azerbaijan s territory in Nagorno Karabakh for the war to stop 514 The next day Aliyev issued an official statement that Azerbaijan was writing a new history describing Karabakh as an ancient Azerbaijani territory and longstanding home to Azerbaijanis and claiming that Armenians had occupied Azerbaijan s territory destroying its religious and cultural heritage for three decades He added that Azerbaijan would restore its cities and destroyed mosques and accused Armenia of distorting history 515 Two days later Aliyev s aide Hikmat Hajiyev said that Armenia had deployed cluster munitions against cities 516 however this had not been verified by other sources On 7 October 2020 Azerbaijan officially notified members of the World Conference on Constitutional Justice the Conference of European Constitutional Courts the Association of Asian Constitutional Courts and similar organisations that it had launched the operation in line with international law to re establish its internationally recognised territorial integrity and for the safety of its people 517 He also accused Armenia of ethnic discrimination on account of the historical expulsion or self exile of ethnic minority communities highlighting its mono ethnic population 518 On 10 October 2020 Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov stated that the truce signed on the same day was temporary 519 Despite this Aliyev stated that both parties were now attempting to determine a political resolution to the conflict 520 On 21 October 2020 Aliyev stated that Azerbaijan did not rule out the introduction of international observers and peacekeepers in Nagorno Karabakh but will put forward some conditions when the time comes 521 He then added that Azerbaijan did not agree for a referendum in Nagorno Karabakh 522 but didn t exclude the cultural autonomy of Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh 521 and reaffirmed that the Azerbaijan considers Armenians living in Nagorno Karabakh as their citizens promising security and rights 523 On 26 October 2020 Aliyev stated that the Azerbaijani government will inspect and record the destruction by Armenian forces in Armenian occupied territories surrounding Nagorno Karabakh during the Nagorno Karabakh conflict 524 Allegations of third party involvementMain article Allegations of third party involvement in the Second Nagorno Karabakh War Because of the geography history and sensitivities of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict accusations allegations and statements have been made of involvement by third party and international actors International reactionsMain article International reactions to the Second Nagorno Karabakh WarSee alsoRepublic of Armenia v Republic of Azerbaijan ICJ case 2021 2023 Armenia Azerbaijan border crisis 2014 Armenian Azerbaijani clashes List of territorial disputesPortals Azerbaijan WarNotes Denied by Azerbaijan 1 2 and Turkey 3 Turkey and Azerbaijan deny direct involvement of Turkey 14 15 16 Reported by Azerbaijan 23 and some Armenian military officials 24 also reports that Russia supplied arms to Armenia via Iran 25 26 27 It has been denied by Iran 28 29 On 21 October 2021 the Ministry of Defence of the Republic of Azerbaijan published a list of dead servicemen It said 2 908 people were killed during the war 59 although at least two of the soldiers named were killed after the conflict ended 73 74 leaving a total of 2 906 servicemen confirmed killed in the war a b By 27 September 2021 84 civilians were confirmed killed in the conflict 80 of which died in the Republic of Artsakh and 4 were killed in Armenia 1 2 Another 22 were still missing 3 Subsequently the number of civilians missing was updated to 21 by 21 March 2022 4 bringing the total number of confirmed civilian fatalities to 85 Nagorno Karabakh was an autonomous region of Azerbaijan during the Soviet era and is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan At the end of Soviet period it was recorded as being populated by 76 9 Armenians 21 5 Azerbaijanis and 1 5 other groups totalling 188 685 persons in the 1989 census The surrounding districts occupied by the Republic of Artsakh since the 1994 ceasefire were recorded in the 1979 census to have a population of 97 7 Azerbaijanis 1 3 Kurds 0 7 Russians 0 1 Armenians and 0 1 Lezgins for a total of 186 874 persons This does not include the populations of Fuzuli District and Agdam District which were only partially under Armenian control before the 2020 war References Azerbaijan denies Turkey sent it fighters from Syria 28 September 2020 Archived from the original on 7 October 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2020 Nagorno Karabakh Azerbaijan accuses Armenia of rocket attack The Guardian 5 October 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2020 Turkiye nin Daglik Karabag a parali asker gonderdigi iddiasi in Turkish Deutsche Welle 29 September 2020 Archived from the original on 2 October 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2020 a b Butler Ed 10 December 2020 The Syrian mercenaries used as cannon fodder in Nagorno Karabakh BBC France accuses Turkey of sending Syrian jihadists to Nagorno Karabakh Reuters 1 October 2020 Archived from the original on 4 October 2020 Retrieved 1 October 2020 We now have information which indicates that Syrian fighters from jihadist groups have transited through Gaziantep southeastern Turkey to reach the Nagorno Karabakh theatre of operations Turkey deploying Syrian fighters to help ally Azerbaijan two fighters say Reuters 28 September 2020 Archived from the original on 8 October 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2020 Armenia Azerbaijan conflict Azerbaijan president vows to fight on bbc com 30 September 2020 Archived from the original on 1 October 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2020 Carley Patricia 29 September 2020 Turkey recruiting Syrians to guard troops and facilities in Azerbaijan Middle East Eye Archived from the original on 2 October 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2020 McKernan Bethan Safi Michael 30 September 2020 Nagorno Karabakh at least three Syrian fighters killed The Guardian Archived from the original on 8 October 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2020 Prinuzhdenie k konfliktu Coercion to conflict Kommersant in Russian 16 October 2020 Retrieved 21 April 2021 Kramer Andrew E 29 January 2021 Armenia and Azerbaijan What Sparked War and Will Peace Prevail The New York Times Retrieved 4 March 2021 Armenia has said that Turkey was directly involved in the fighting in and around Nagorno Karabakh and that a Turkish F 16 fighter shot down an Armenian jet Turkey denied those accusations Tsvetkova Maria Auyezov Olzhas 9 November 2020 Analysis Russia and Turkey keep powder dry in Nagorno Karabakh conflict Reuters Retrieved 4 March 2021 Turkey s support for Azerbaijan has been vital and Azerbaijan s superior weaponry and battlefield advances have reduced its incentive to reach a lasting peace deal Ankara denies its troops are involved in fighting but Aliyev has acknowledged some Turkish F 16 fighter jets remained in Azerbaijan after a military drill this summer and there are reports of Russian and Turkish drones being used by both sides Texts adopted Implementation of the Common Foreign and Security Policy annual report 2020 European Parliament 20 January 2021 Retrieved 20 January 2021 Strongly condemns the destabilising role of Turkey which further undermines the fragile stability in the whole of the South Caucasus region calls on Turkey to refrain from any interference in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict including offering military support to Azerbaijan and to desist from its destabilising actions and actively promote peace condemns furthermore the transfer of foreign terrorist fighters by Turkey from Syria and elsewhere to Nagorno Karabakh as confirmed by international actors including the OSCE Minsk Group Co Chair countries regrets its willingness to destabilise the OSCE Minsk Group as it pursues ambitions of playing a more decisive role in the conflict F 16s Reveal Turkey s Drive to Expand Its Role in the Southern Caucasus Stratfor 8 October 2020 Archived from the original on 10 October 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2020 The presence of the Turkish fighter aircraft demonstrate s direct military involvement by Turkey that goes far beyond already established support such as its provision of Syrian fighters and military equipment to Azerbaijani forces Chausovsky Eugene 7 October 2020 Turkey Challenging Russia s Monopoly in the South Caucasus Center for Global Policy Archived from the original on 7 October 2020 it has been reported though denied by Turkish and Azerbaijani officials that Turkish soldiers and aircraft have been directly involved in the fighting a b c d e f Everything We Know About The Fighting That Has Erupted Between Armenia And Azerbaijan The Drive 28 September 2020 Retrieved 1 November 2020 Turkey supplies T 300 Kasirga rocket system to Azerbaijan AzerNews 21 September 2016 Melman Yossi 7 October 2020 As Nagorno Karabakh Conflict Expands Israel Azerbaijan Arms Trade Thrives Haaretz Retrieved 4 March 2021 Georgian Armen 6 October 2020 Nagorno Karabakh conflict Israel under diplomatic fire over arms to Azerbaijan France 24 Retrieved 4 March 2021 Semerdjian Maria Francis Ellen 1 November 2020 Despite Lebanon s woes Armenians spring to action for Nagorno Karabakh Reuters Retrieved 1 November 2020 Zargaryan Robert 3 October 2020 Ուղիղ չվերթով Երևան առաջնագիծ գնալու պարտաստակամությամբ By direct flight to Yerevan ready to go to the front line azatutyun am in Armenian RFE RL Archived from the original on 6 October 2020 Retrieved 6 October 2020 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Cragg Gulliver 7 October 2020 Armenian volunteer returns from France to fight for Nagorno Karabakh France24 Archived from the original on 7 October 2020 Retrieved 7 October 2020 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Harounyan Stephanie 11 October 2020 De Marseille a Erevan un militant marque au front Liberation in French Prezident Ermenistanin tehlukesizliyi pulsuz silahlanmasi Rusiya terefinden temin edilir apa az in Azerbaijani 11 October 2020 Archived from the original on 11 October 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2020 Khojoyan Sara 19 November 2020 Armenia Fired Iskander Missiles in Azeri War Ex Army Chief Says Bloomberg News Archived from the original on 19 November 2020 Retrieved 2 January 2021 Iran denies allowing passage of weapons into Armenia after video emerges on social media intellinews com 29 September 2020 Retrieved 29 September 2020 Video footages spread regarding weapons and military equipment transport from Iran to Armenia apa az 30 September 2020 Archived from the original on 30 September 2020 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Military supplies for Armenia being shipped through Iran azernews az AzerNews 30 September 2020 Archived from the original on 30 September 2020 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Spokesman Denies Claim That Arms Transferred via Iran to Armenia mfa gov ir Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran 29 September 2020 Archived from the original on 30 September 2020 Retrieved 29 September 2020 شایعات مبنی بر کمک ایران به ارمنستان کاملا بی اساس است iribnews ir in Persian Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting 30 September 2020 Archived from the original on 30 September 2020 Retrieved 30 September 2020 a b c Deal Struck to End Nagorno Karabakh War The Moscow Times 10 November 2020 Retrieved 10 November 2020 One nation two states on display as Erdogan visits Azerbaijan for Karabakh victory parade France24 10 December 2020 Azerbaijan s historic win was an important geopolitical coup for Erdogan who has cemented Turkey s leading role as a powerbroker in the ex Soviet Caucasus region Armenia Azerbaijan and Russia sign Nagorno Karabakh peace deal BBC 10 November 2020 The BBC s Orla Guerin in Baku says that overall the deal should be read as a victory for Azerbaijan and a defeat for Armenia Turkey Russia to set up joint center to watch Nagorno Karabakh peace Hurriyet Daily News 11 November 2020 Isgaldan azad edilmis seher ve kendlerimiz Azerbaijan State News Agency in Azerbaijani 1 December 2020 Archived from the original on 4 December 2020 Retrieved 1 December 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Kramer Andrew E 10 November 2020 Facing Military Debacle Armenia Accepts a Deal in Nagorno Karabakh War The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 11 November 2020 Retrieved 11 November 2020 Release of the Press Service of the President president az Official website of the President of Azerbaijan 4 October 2020 Archived from the original on 9 October 2020 Retrieved 7 October 2020 Major General Mayis Barkhudarov We will fight to destroy the enemy completely Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence 28 September 2020 Archived from the original on 8 October 2020 President Ilham Aliyev congratulates 1st Army Corps Commander Hikmet Hasanov on liberation of Madagiz from occupation apa az 3 October 2020 Retrieved 3 October 2020 President Ilham Aliyev has congratulated 1st Army Corps Commander Hikmet Hasanov on liberation of Madagiz APA reports a b Release of the Press Service of the President Azerbaijan State News Agency 19 October 2020 Retrieved 20 October 2020 Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev congratulated Chief of the State Border Service SBS Colonel General Elchin Guliyev on raising the Azerbaijani flag over the Khudafarin bridge liberating several residential settlements with the participation of the SBS and instructed to convey his congratulations to all personnel Colonel General Elchin Guliyev reported that the State Border Service personnel will continue to decently fulfill all the tasks set by the Commander in Chief a b Jalal Harutyunyan wounded Mikael Arzumanyan appointed Artsakh Defense Minister 27 October 2020 Artsakh Defense Army deputy commander killed 2 November 2020 Արցախում զոհվել է ՊԲ փոխհրամանատար գնդապետ Հովհաննես Սարգսյանը Deputy Commander of the Defence Army Colonel Hovhannes Sargsyan was killed in Artsakh Lurer com in Armenian 18 November 2020 Archived from the original on 4 February 2021 Retrieved 4 February 2021 Հայաստանի Ազգային հերոս Վահագն Ասատրյանն Օմարի բարձունքներն անառիկ պահեց բայց ընկավ Հադրութը պաշտպանելիս Armenian national hero Vahagn Asatryan kept Omar heights invincible but fell while defending Hadrut 1lurer am in Armenian 1 January 2021 Retrieved 25 March 2021 Tiran Khachatryan National Hero of the Republic of Armenia armradio am Public Radio of Armenia 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b Cities under fire as Armenia Azerbaijan fighting intensifies RTL Today Retrieved 12 November 2020 Armenia Azerbaijan announce new attempt at cease fire AP News Retrieved 19 October 2020 Selo Tapkarakoyunlu primerno v 60 kilometrah ot goroda Gyandzha Voennyj pokazyvaet zhurnalistam raketu Smerch pered razminirovaniem in Russian BBC Russian Service 24 October 2020 Retrieved 24 October 2020 Azerbaijani used TB2 drone to destroy second S 300 SAM of Armenia Global Defense Corp 11 October 2020 Retrieved 1 November 2020 Four Azerbaijanis killed in mine blast in Fuzuli region AzerNews az 28 November 2020 Yazar Yazar 28 November 2020 Azerbaycan esgeri Susa yolunda minaya duserek sehid oldu Sozcu az Veten muharibesinde yaralanan herbcilerin sayi aciqlanib Report az 14 April 2022 Retrieved on 4 May 2022 Armenia Azerbaijan Exchange More PrisonersAzerbaijani captives including Shahbaz Guliyev and Dilgam Asgarov who were held hostage by Armenians brought home Nagorno Karabakh battles Fatalities 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November 2020 Retrieved 11 November 2020 link, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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