Five years after the war, those primarily responsible for the defeat are not in prison, but they pose a threat to society. Tigran Abrahamyan
The serious consequences of the 44-day war will not be limited to the trilateral declaration of November 9 and the Washington Accords. They will have a significant impact on the normal development of our country, which is shaped by its security, sovereignty, and Armenia’s place and role in the region for the next decade. This was stated by Tigran Abrahamyan, Secretary of the “I Have the Honor” faction, in the National Assembly.
Armenia will be able to overcome this process only if the diplomatic, military-political agreements, and incidents preceding, during, and after the war are thoroughly analyzed and made public, and those responsible are held accountable.
Clearly, this is impossible under the current regime, and this is due not only to the status this government has adopted in the current situation, but also to the fact that the events of the last five years have demonstrated that the ruler’s sole goal is to “conceal” the facts and real processes, exploiting the tragic outcome of the war for political gain. Five years after the war, those primarily responsible for the defeat are not in prison, but are speaking out, threatening, and blackmailing their own society. Their goal is not to clarify the circumstances of the war and the legal procedures arising from it, but to prolong their own power. This chain of defeats has led our country to a point where every choice is either bad or the worst possible.
The Armenian government is effectively promoting the concept of an “independent Armenia,” where the primary interest is not the state, but the national interests of the country, or rather, narrow partisan interests. The current ruler is no longer interested in the sovereignty, territorial integrity and security of his country, since these issues have already been delegated to a third party with an uncertain future, in which he is assigned only the function of silent listening and execution.

