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The meeting with Bayramov, the closure of the Metsamor nuclear power plant—what else is the Armenian government hiding?

July 11 2024, 12:34

https://youtu.be/nZharJBNJME

Let’s just introduce you to two facts:

1. “There is no agreement on negotiations between the Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan, Ararat Mirzoyan and Jeyhun Bayramov, in Washington,” the Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Ani Badalyan said on July 9.
On July 10, the same spokesperson of the same Armenian Foreign Ministry announced that the Mirzoyan-Bayramov-Blinken trilateral meeting would be held in Washington on July 10.
Either during his six years in office, Nikol Pashinyan “raised” the level of Armenia’s sovereignty so much that official Yerevan was not informed in advance that Mirzoyan was to meet with Bayramov, or we have a situation in which the Armenian authorities simply deceive their citizens.

Especially after the 44-day war, when for a month and a half, 10 million people were convinced that “WE WILL WIN”, it should not be surprising if the second option turns out to be correct.

2. After Nikol Pashinyan’s meeting with Ursula von der Leyen and Antony Blinken in Brussels, information began to spread online that, in addition to the open part of the meeting, as a result of which it became clear that Western partners had prepared a package of proposals for Armenia, €270 million investments for Yerevan from the European Union, and $65 million from the United States, there was also a closed part of the talks. There were such points on the agenda of multilateral cooperation that the public was not informed about.

The information was so serious that even the Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Maria Zakharova, commented on it. In response to Zakharova’s statements, the Armenian Foreign Ministry noted that there was no secret agenda in Brussels, and Pashinyan’s contacts with von der Leyen and Blinken were only about the sustainability and diversification of the economy.

However, what do we see now? The Armenian media continues to write that following the April 5 agreements, Armenia assumed obligations to close the Metsamor nuclear power plant (something that Turkey and Azerbaijan have been seeking for many years). However, the Armenian authorities, on the one hand, do not refute these publications, and on the other hand, through the head of the Armenian Security Council, Armen Grigoryan, announce that they are negotiating with the United States on the construction of a new nuclear power plant.

It should be noted that the West is actually calling on official Yerevan to build a modular nuclear power plant, which has practically no use in civilian life. Such nuclear power plants are being built for military bases.

These are only two examples that clearly demonstrate that the government, which promised to be transparent, is boldly deceiving its people and its voters. Can you imagine what will “come out” when political changes take place in Armenia?

Think about it…