
ArmInfo. If the Armenian opposition wants to remove Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan from power, it must first defeat him in the "war against memory." This message was delivered by Armen Ashotyan, Deputy Chairman of the Republican Party of Armenia (RPA), political prisoner, from Vardashen Prison, two weeks after the latest parliamentary elections in Armenia.
Ashotyan recalled that the elections were more of an electoral sham than a manifestation of the will of the Armenian people. However, according to him, the problem is much deeper and is not limited to the results of the rigged elections and the crisis that followed. "Everyone is dissatisfied with the election results: Pashinyan, who failed to secure the coveted constitutional majority, and the opposition, which failed to achieve the necessary figures to remove the Armenian prime minister from power. But I think this was natural and inevitable, and it was obvious that the crisis that arose in 2020 could not be overcome through political means, namely parliamentary elections," the politician noted.
The reason for this, as the RPA deputy chairman explained, is that following the 44-day war of 2020, the Armenian people are in an ongoing, debilitating crisis-not a political one, but a systemic crisis of values. According to him, during the previous elections, Armenian citizens as a society chose not only between options for their future but also between assessments of their past. "That is, with our vote, we not only answered the question of 'where are we going,' but also the question of 'where are we from?' We must have the courage to admit that, despite all the shameful pressure, falsifications, interference, and pre-election bribes, Pashinyan has managed to cultivate adherents to his 'new morality' in society. Yes, he doesn't yet have a majority behind this agenda, but the united opposition must acknowledge that there is no majority behind 'classical patriotism' either," Ashotyan emphasized.
Meanwhile, according to him, Pashinyan has provoked and is waging a "memory war" against the Armenian people. "And if we want to win and remove him from power, then we must first defeat him in this very 'memory war.' As the Roman historian Tacitus wrote: 'Those who go into battle should remember their ancestors behind them, and their descendants ahead,'" the politician concluded.