
ArmInfo. "Okay, if you're not coming to the debate, then don't come. Let me show you the army's achievements in armament and equipment in recent years, the engineering work done, and the soldiers' salaries. You'll just have to put on one of the tightest masks, lest your jaw suddenly drop," Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan wrote on social media, in response to remarks made by third President Serzh Sargsyan.
"SS (Serzh Sargsyan) once again tried to create the impression that in 2018-2020 we disbanded the army, and what happened was a manifestation of that. Now, a quote from SS's statement, which he made on April 17, 2018, from the rostrum of the National Assembly, while running for prime minister. He had previously stated that Azerbaijan would likely attempt to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh issue militarily.
A quote from SS's speech on April 17, 2018: "The next lesson is that we still have a long way to go to devote the utmost attention to reforming our armed forces, acquiring new weapons, producing our own weapons, and, most importantly, always maintaining the high morale of the Armenian soldier and officer, solving their daily issues, and strengthening their confidence in the future in the face of any events."
If even a small part of what you said about the army after 2020 was true, then in 2018 you should have said something different. You should have said: "For a very long time, we have prioritized reforming our armed forces, acquiring new weapons, producing our own weapons, and, most importantly, always maintaining the high morale of the Armenian soldier and officer, solving their daily problems, and strengthening their confidence in the future in the face of any events."
Why didn't you say that? Because you knew that as of 2018, instead of an army, you have a system for siphoning gasoline and diesel fuel from the tank with a hose, not an army. P.S.: Don't wake him, let him sleep peacefully," Pashinyan wrote.
It's worth noting that Serzh Sargsyan, speaking on the Imnemnimi podcast, cited three reasons for the 44- day war in Artsakh in 2020. "The first, of course, is the avoidance of negotiations and, in fact, the refusal to negotiate. Furthermore, the negotiators proposed some kind of incomprehensible solution. And these circumstances led to the negotiation process ceasing... I think he (the country's leader - ed.) was unable to fully engage in the negotiations." "Just reading the documents alone made it difficult to understand where these documents were leading," Sargsyan noted. The second reason, in his opinion, was that events had occurred that gave Azerbaijan the opportunity to justify its initiative to start the war. "The third circumstance was that Azerbaijani and Turkish intelligence were well informed about the situation in our army and saw that the army's combat readiness had noticeably declined," the former president stated.
When asked whether the war was inevitable, he definitely answered no. "Looking ahead to whether such an outcome was predictable, I will unequivocally say no. But already by the second half of 2018, in 2019, I saw problems within our armed forces, I became convinced of them in 2020, and in August 2020, I stated during a press conference that military action was imminent," Serzh Sargsyan said.