Saturday, August 16, 2025

Armenia and Azerbaijan framework for "peace" etc...

 


The import thing here

 is understanding 

the role of the demonic 

in what is going on.


The deal that wasn’t 

Meduza.io 08/11/25

"Armenia and Azerbaijan didn’t actually sign a peace agreement at the White House. So why did their leaders say Trump deserves a Nobel Prize?"


"Caucasus expert Roman Chernikov breaks down what really happened at the White House summit and what issues the two countries still need to resolve."


"Little more than a photo-op"

(As was yesterdays nonsense with Putin in Alaska.)

"A day before Friday’s summit in Washington, Donald Trump wrote a misleading post on his Truth Social platform calling the meeting an “official Peace Signing Ceremony.” 


(This guy?

would do something like that?

No way!

Surely you jest!)


"Major global outlets like Associated Press, CNBC, and Euronews were quick to reprint that wording. In reality, however, the two parties only signed a declaration containing a straightforward and fairly obvious seven-point statement.'


(I said it my post 

that it was a "framework"

Saturday, August 9, 2025

Armenia /Azerbaijan "Peace" Initiative, 

False prophet, Turkey, Beast from the Abyss, etc...

(Initiative, its just a framework)


"Thus, the White House event 

was basically just a ceremonial gesture — 

after all, 

the two countries’ foreign ministers 

had already deemed the document 

ready five months earlier. 

When the heads of state 

will actually sign it remains unknown."


Here is the role of the demonic in things

clearly displayed for all to see.


If:

"the two countries’ foreign ministers 

had already deemed the document 

ready five months earlier."


THEN WHY 

DID THEY WAIT TILL

8/8

TO SIGN?


"The situation with the Armenian Constitution is more complicated. Nikol Pashinyan (PM) has repeatedly shifted his position — at times announcing a constitutional referendum for 2027, at others saying that no changes are necessary."


(Its why some consider him an instrument of Azerbaijan, and then he will just be like:

"What are our options here?"

Which is kinda true to so who knows?)


"Will the peace treaty involve Armenia giving up Karabakh completely?"

"Yes. The treaty states that both countries confirm “the boundaries between the Soviet Socialist Republics of the former USSR became the international borders of respective independent states” and respect one another’s territorial integrity. This means Karabakh is officially Azerbaijani territory."


"Earlier drafts of the treaty included rights for Karabakh’s Armenian residents, but that was before September 2023 (when Armenia lost control of Karabakh). Additionally, Azerbaijan insisted on including the right of return for Azerbaijanis who were expelled from Armenia at the start of the conflict in the late 1980s and early 1990s."


"Another major concern for Armenian society is the fate of Armenian prisoners held in Baku, including former Karabakh leaders and ordinary soldiers whom Azerbaijan refuses to classify as prisoners of war because they were detained after November 9, 2020. However, the peace treaty does not guarantee their release — Baku wants to keep that issue for the future as a political bargaining chip."


"What is the ‘Trump Route’ everybody’s talking about?"

(It's trouble, just like everything else 

this guy does, that's what it is.)

"That’s the new name being used for the “Zangezur corridor” a proposed route connecting mainland Azerbaijan to the exclave of Nakhchivan through Armenian territory. Although its opening isn’t mentioned in the peace treaty (the issue sparked so much controversy that it was left out), Baku has made it clear it’s not giving up on the idea."


"It was the Trump administration that came up with a proposal that apparently satisfied both Baku and Yerevan. The details remain unclear, but the core idea is that an American company would manage the Armenian section of the road. The project’s official name is as grandiose as it gets: the Trump Road for International Peace and Prosperity (TRIPP)."


"The specifics are likely spelled out in a different document signed the same day between Yerevan and Washington — the “Memorandum of Understanding between the Government of the Republic of Armenia and the Government of the United States of America on Partnership in the Field of Capacity Development of the ‘Crossroads of Peace’ Project.”


"The full text hasn’t been released yet, but the main demands from each side have long been known. Baku insists traffic along the road must be “unimpeded” (a word that appears in the trilateral declaration), while Yerevan argues it can’t be called a “corridor” and that the road must operate under Armenian law and respect its national sovereignty. How these conflicting points will be resolved remains an open question."

"Whether Russia will be able to use the so-called “Trump Route” for rail connections to Turkey and Iran is still an open question. Nikol Pashinyan himself has already assured Moscow that this remains a possibility."


(After yesterday in Alaska?

My guess would be they aint to worried about it.)


"What about Iran? 

Will it really accept the ‘Trump Route’ on its border?"


(What do you think?

Iran’s attack on Qatar air base hit geodesic dome used for US (secure) communications, satellite photos show

AP 7/11/25

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — An Iranian attack on an air base in Qatar that’s key to the U.S. military hit ("Obliterated") a geodesic dome housing equipment used by the Americans for secure communications, satellite images analyzed Friday by The Associated Press show.

Used by Centcom as a forward operating base.

All you need to know is there was a ceasefire the next day.)


"Iran’s reaction to the news from Washington has been the toughest so far. Ali Akbar Velayati, an advisor to Iran’s Supreme Leader, said Iranian territory could continue to be used to connect mainland Azerbaijan with Nakhichevan, and added that he would oppose the creation of the “Trump Route,” whether Russia is involved or not. “NATO wants to wedge itself between Russia and Iran like a viper, but Iran won’t allow it,” he said."

"It’s worth noting that right now, an Iranian company is building a road in Armenia’s Syunik province meant to connect the country’s north and south. This means that sooner or later, Iranian builders will have to come face-to-face with the American company managing the Trump Road (their routes are almost perpendicular). How these roads intersect will be an important engineering and political challenge."



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