Armenia awaits results as counting continues in high-stakes elections
Counting is underway in Armenia's elections. The results of the vote are set to determine the political direction of the country of three million peop...
The new AnewZ documentary, TARGET: Yerevan, builds its explosive case on exclusive, secret recordings originally published by Minval Politika.
In them, former International Criminal Court Chief Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo explained exactly why he entered the South Caucasus conflict. He looked at the situation following the Prague agreements, concluded that the issue of the so-called ‘Artsakh’ was dead and would be buried, and decided he had to ruin the show.

He did not act alone. Ocampo was allegedly bankrolled by Russian-Armenian oligarchs, directing a coordinated social media offensive to corner European leaders and manipulate the Armenian elections. The objective was not merely diplomatic pressure; it was the removal of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. Pashinyan’s normalisation agreements with Azerbaijan threaten to sever Moscow’s historical control over the region, making his administration what the film describes as a primary target for Russian hybrid warfare.
The recordings purportedly expose a shadow network of legal mercenaries, oligarchs, and Washington lobbyists operating as a unified front. At the top of the financial chain sits Samvel Karapetyan, a Russian-Armenian billionaire. Eduard Melikyan, Karapetyan’s political coordinator, described his employer on tape as the “big boss” in Russia, claiming their political party had access to limitless resources. Karapetyan currently faces serious criminal cases in Armenia linked to the state electricity networks.

Using this alleged funding, Ocampo built an asymmetrical information war. He admits on tape to receiving funds from Armenians living in Russia to pay three young operatives who managed his social media output. They invented specific hashtags, “COP29, Stop the Genocide, Free Armenian Hostages”, and mobilised 6,500 diaspora Armenians to post them daily. The campaign was engineered to catch the attention of mainstream media and force the hand of European politicians. Ocampo even claims on tape to have placed a former legal adviser to Josep Borrell on his payroll inside the European Parliament to directly pressure Commissioner von der Leyen.

The documentary asserts that the operation in Europe matched a mirrored offensive in the United States. Ara Papian, a former ambassador acting as a Washington lobbyist, coordinated with Ocampo to align the Armenian diaspora’s political weight. They reportedly targeted U.S. Senators, specifically discussing financial and voter support in exchange for political backing. The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), aligned with the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), applied intense grassroots pressure to disrupt the U.S.-brokered peace agreements.
The obvious objection to this framing is that domestic opposition to Pashinyan is entirely organic. Protesters in Yerevan demand his resignation, shouting that he is a traitor. This anger is real, but the recordings reveal that this domestic grief is being weaponised. The documentary argues that Russian intelligence and pro-Russian factions exploit these internal divisions, amplifying radical views through covert social media manipulation to keep the society fractured. Russia needs the conflict. If peace and normalisation take hold, Russian influence in the South Caucasus slowly vanishes.

The Armenian Church has also become a critical battleground. Melikyan noted that Karapetyan heavily funded the church, claiming it ensured its leadership remained loyal to his directives. When the political climate heated up, the head of the church explicitly asked for protection. Pashinyan responded by aggressively targeting clerics who campaigned against the government, with Ocampo noting that the Prime Minister imprisoned bishops he believed were working for Russia.
The alleged network initially targeted May, with Ocampo outlining a strategy to hijack the major European Union meeting in Yerevan. But with that summit now in the past, the entire machinery has pivoted to the upcoming elections. The strategy remains the same: mobilise protests demanding the rights of the Nagorno-Karabakh people, create a binary choice for the electorate, and force a constitutional crisis. The documentary suggests the ultimate goal is to install a pro-Russian coalition that will block the peace treaty.

Pashinyan knows exactly who is coming for him. He publicly named the old elites, warning figures like Samvel Karapetyan and Robert Kocharyan that they are living the last month of their political lives and will sit in prison for years. The citizens of Armenia now face a stark choice between Pashinyan’s difficult peace and the old guard’s promised conflict. The recordings indicate that the people promising to save Armenia are being paid by the country that refuses to let it go.
Counting is underway in Armenia's elections. The results of the vote are set to determine the political direction of the country of three million people for the next few years. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is hoping to fend off challenges from several pro-Russia candidates to secure a third term.
Armenian authorities arrested six candidates from the pro-Russian Strong Armenia bloc on Saturday, one day before voters were due to take part in parliamentary elections.
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The U.S. said it struck Iranian radar sites on Qeshm Island and in Goruk after intercepting four drones, while Iran's Revolutionary Guards said they launches retaliatory strikes on four tankers in the Strait of Hormuz and targeted U.S. bases in the Gulf.
Counting is underway in Armenia’s parliamentary elections, with the results of the vote set to determine the makeup of the National Assembly and shape the country's political direction for the foreseeable future. But in Armenia, the final result is not decided by vote percentages alone.
Counting is underway in Armenia's elections. The results of the vote are set to determine the political direction of the country of three million people for the next few years. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is hoping to fend off challenges from several pro-Russia candidates to secure a third term.
For about three decades after the Soviet collapse, Armenia anchored its foreign and security policy to Moscow.
After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, newly independent Armenia emerged with the promise of democracy. But in the years that followed, conflicts and political assassinations sidetracked politics in the country, until a 2018 revolution restored momentum to the promise.
Armenian authorities arrested six candidates from the pro-Russian Strong Armenia bloc on Saturday, one day before voters were due to take part in parliamentary elections.
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