
ArmInfo. Former President Robert Kocharyan has characterized Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's claims—that the return of opposition forces to power would trigger a new war—as "blatant blackmail."
In an interview with RTVI, the second president of Armenia pointed out the irony of the Prime Minister's rhetoric. Kocharyan noted that the threats are coming from a leader whose tenure has been defined by a "catastrophically lost war" and a significant loss of life: there was the loss of territory, the sovereign territory of Armenia, the complete loss of Karabakh.
" The person who is the root cause of this war, these clashes, and these losses is now speaking of peace and attempting to associate his image with it," Kocharyan stated. "First, this is shameless; second, it is blackmail; and third, it is a sum of both. He is being dishonest with the voter. Kocharyan accused Pashinyan of using the "club" of war threats to break the will of the electorate. He argued that the opposite is true: if Pashinyan remains in power, the threat of war will "double or triple" because the appetites of Azerbaijan and Turkey will only increase. "I am talking about the threats that Pashinyan's policy brings with it. Pashinyan's policy is obviously expressed even in his latest statement that Azerbaijan is the guarantor of Armenia's security. This, of course, sounds absurd, but this was voiced by him and the Speaker of the Armenian Parliament. That is, it would be like the Gaza Strip suddenly declaring that Israel is the guarantor of Palestinian security. Is such a thing even imaginable?" the former president stated.
When asked what the Armenian electorate currently wants, Robert Kocharyan noted that they want stability and clarity. "People are tired of contradictory statements, hysteria, and the lack of clarity about what is happening. Because when the authorities or those in power can, for a week or two, make mutually exclusive statements regarding geopolitical orientation, domestic policy, war, peace, etc., it creates anxiety. People love stability; they want to understand what will happen tomorrow. During my ten years as president, those were the most peaceful years for Armenia," the former RA President emphasized.