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7 Nov, 2024 08:48

US pushing ex-Soviet state to ‘suicide’ – Russian intel agency

Armenian elites are under pressure to abandon national traditions for the sake of Western alignment, Moscow has said
US pushing ex-Soviet state to ‘suicide’ – Russian intel agency

The US is determined to force Armenia down an anti-Russian path and towards “national suicide,” the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) warned on Thursday.

The US State Department is spurring into action “pro-Western structures in the civil society” of the former Soviet republic, seeking to push Armenian political elites “to speed up full reorientation towards the pro-Western format of development,” the Russian agency said in a statement. The methods used by Washington have previously been tested in Ukraine and Moldova, it claimed.

US-affiliated personnel will train Armenian officials in key government agencies and “ensure wide representation of foreign advisers” to guide Yerevan down Washington’s preferred route, the SVR alleged. This will inevitably be antagonistic towards Russia, it warned.

“To achieve the ‘high goal’ of joining the US-led so-called civilized society, the Armenian people… will have to renounce its own traditions, national societal norms, and stable commercial ties” with other countries in the region, the statement said. “Washington is strongly pushing Armenia towards national suicide,” it added.

A land-locked country in the Caucasus region, Armenia has experienced political turmoil in recent years. It was involved in a decades-long row with neighboring Azerbaijan over the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, which declared independence amid the collapse of the USSR and had remained self-governed with Yerevan’s backing. Baku restored full control over the area in a series of military clashes with separatists from 2020 to 2023. Armenia and Azerbaijan also engaged in direct border skirmishes.

The government of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan claimed that Russia, which has a security treaty with Yerevan, failed to support the country in the dispute with Baku. Armenia has since boosted security ties with Western nations in a change of course hailed by Washington.

Western officials spend “a great deal of time on” Armenia, as it is trying to “get closer to the United States,” James O’Brien, the US assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, told the Senate earlier this year.

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