ArmInfo. Armenia lost the 44-day war in the fall of 2020 for very subjective reasons. This was stated by the second President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan at a meeting with students and teachers of the "Armenian University".
When asked how it happened that 150 thousand Nagorno-Karabakh defeated 5 million Azerbaijan at the time, Kocharyan suggested comparing the Karabakh movement and the first victorious war with subsequent wars for the sake of interactivity of the conversation.
The second President of Armenia stated that there were three, not two, wars for Nagorno-Karabakh. "The first war was the victorious war of 1991-1994, the second, which is usually called the Four-Day War, in April 2016, which I would rate, so to speak, as a draw. We had certain territorial losses, only about 600-800 hectares, but the diplomatic achievement was also obvious. I would even say that we came out of that war with a small plus, and the next war, the one in 2020, we simply lost, and, in my assessment, in my opinion, for very, very subjective reasons," Kocharyan noted.
Speaking about the advantages of the first war, the second president stated that Nagorno-Karabakh with a population of 150,000 people won a victory over Azerbaijan, which at that time had a population of 7.5 million people, and this was in conditions when at that time Armenia was experiencing an energy crisis, quite serious problems.
"First of all, we in Karabakh were convinced that the Karabakh people had no opportunity to live as part of Azerbaijan. This is an existential problem, and this danger, especially after Sumgait, was so real for all of us that it united all the residents of Karabakh. It did not matter whether someone loved the other or not. It was just a common danger that united the entire nation. This was probably one of the main factors. A fairly high level of organization, in general in Karabakh, maybe this is Soviet upbringing, but the level of education in Karabakh, compared to Azerbaijan, was much higher. People were much more disciplined in all matters, and this discipline and organization played a significant role when the Soviet Union was falling apart, when, roughly speaking, chaos reigned in almost all areas, but we were able to organize and organized ourselves quite effectively," the politician continued.
He added to this the mobilization resource that was sufficiently prepared by the Soviet Union. "When we were forming the army in Karabakh, we had practically no shortage of people with military specialties. It was just very easy training, very easy intervention, and the people were ready, they were ready soldiers, and there was a fairly serious officer corps from the residents of Karabakh who came to Karabakh and contributed their experience to military activity. A very important factor at that time was the information that came from Karabakh and the Karabakh movement, and then from 1991 to 1994 from the battlefield. There was truthful coverage of both successes and failures," Kocharyan noted.
According to him, the presentation of the real situation was an extremely important circumstance, since without it it is simply impossible to build trust between the army, the people and the government.
"Another very important circumstance: in all wars, and especially in the first war, the Azerbaijanis had a quantitative advantage in all components: human, financial, military equipment, ammunition. The main large reserves and military units of the Soviet Union were located in Azerbaijan and Georgia, and all this simply went to Azerbaijan. There was almost nothing in Armenia. There was a small ammunition depot in Balakhovit, but in the first years of the war there was a fire, and the depot was completely destroyed. But the difference was that we had a qualitative difference in all components: organization, knowledge and mobilization, which needed to be formed. Another circumstance that worked in our favor was the instability in Azerbaijan, the constant change of power. It was a story about a chicken and an egg. They suffered defeat, this defeat led to a change of government, a change of government led to new defeats, and this cycle continued," Kocharyan said, noting that while he was the president of Artsakh, 5 presidents changed in Azerbaijan. He stressed that at that time the government in Armenia was much more stable, there were internal political problems, but this situation was incomparable with Azerbaijan.
Speaking about the Four-Day War of 2016, Kocharyan began to present facts working against Armenia, namely stability in Azerbaijan, while Armenia already had a certain level of internal tension.
The second president drew attention to the subversive work carried out in Armenia by numerous NGOs. Kocharyan noted that only recently it became known how much money USAID spent on the creation and implementation of such systems in countries like Armenia, which played a very serious role in the destruction of both domestic political and national unity in Armenia.
"And what else worked against us? The Azerbaijani army was much more combat-ready than during the first war. So, they drew conclusions and very consistently prepared for a new war, and for the first time it became obvious that drones would play a serious role in future wars. This should have been a very serious signal for serious changes in our understanding of what the next war could be.
But, I repeat, the Armenian army was qualitatively combat-ready, and this combat readiness was demonstrated during the four-day war. I repeat, there was a danger, the problems were already visible, which means that it was necessary to look at the current situation from a completely different angle and take drastic measures. I know that the authorities tried to take quite serious steps, they did, but everything changed after 2018, because, let me open the brackets here, they really did take serious steps concerning the attitude towards air defense, and drones, and the structure of the army. Equipping the front line with various equipment that allows for preventive actions. So what do we have since October 2020? The polarization of society in Armenia has already reached a fantastic level, society is divided into black, white, old, new, robbers and robbers, and all this was spread not only at the political level, but was also projected onto the army," the politician continued.
He noted that the generals were intimidated, and in the public consciousness at that time, the generals began to be perceived as a stratum that robbed the army and had nothing to do with the army, and even then I realized that generals with a military past began to appear more often in public places in civilian clothes.
"It was a tool for undermining the army, for destroying it. Whether it was done consciously or unconsciously, I do not know, and I do not want to give an assessment in this case, but it was a fact. If any of you had studied the press of 2018, 2019, 2020, you would have seen that this was one of the main, primary topics in the information field, and this could not but have a serious impact on the army, because intimidation of the command staff in the information field occurred every day. At that time, the situation in the country as a whole changed significantly, the model of government changed, and populism really became a serious factor, in almost everything," Kocharyan noted.
The politician noted that the people who came to power in 2018 ignored the necessary reforms that needed to be made after the lessons learned in the 4-day war, and the main topic in the Armed Forces was the strawberry reform, and not the combat readiness of the forces.
"I was in Karabakh on the third day after the war began. I stayed in Karabakh for two weeks, and I must say that after my arrival, on the second or third day, I asked both Bako Sahakyan and Arkady Ghukasyan to organize a meeting with Arayik Harutyunyan. My main message was to do everything possible to stop the war, because every day of the war brings more and more problems, because we are not ready. In this form, in this changed situation, you will not have a victory. Then Arayik Harutyunyan said: "If I meet with Kocharyan, Pashinyan will eat me." Bako Sahakyan conveyed this to me verbatim. And we got what we got in Karabakh. Already in 2016, the first signs appeared, from which we simply had to draw very serious conclusions, not to buy Su-30 for the sake of selfies, anti-aircraft systems were needed, very serious investments in air defense were needed, but this was not done. These are the main reasons why we survived this evolution in 1991-1994, the war in 2016, which was interesting because it was very short, but it predetermined the trend, and we, in fact, did not draw any conclusions from it. So, let's come to the following conclusion: during this time, we began to yield to Azerbaijan not only in almost all quantitative indicators, but also began to sharply yield in qualitative issues related to our security," Kocharyan summed up.