Make a Call to England and Raise a New Anti-Russian Hysteria: Naira Zohrabyan
Armenian National Assembly member Naira Zohrabyan wrote on her Facebook page: "Make a call to England and raise a new anti-Russian hysteria. When Nikol complains about the CSTO's sluggishness, in reality, the complaint is aimed at Russia; he simply lacks the courage to directly accuse Russia. And when his team blindly repeats his words and threatens to appeal to the UN Security Council, these people once again do not understand what they are saying.
Yes, appeal to the UN Security Council, but let me provide a little background for the applicants. Thus, to pass any resolution in the UN Security Council, it is necessary for all 15 members of the Security Council to vote in favor, and it is mandatory that the 5 permanent members of the UN Security Council—Russia, France, China, Great Britain, and the United States—also vote in favor and none of them vetoes it.
Now a question for the anti-Russian-Soros conglomerate: Are you sure that Great Britain, which has already announced significant investments in the occupied territories of Artsakh and for whom the price of politics is the oil flowing through the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, will vote in favor of the Azerbaijani armed forces withdrawing from the sovereign territory of Armenia?
Of course, they will not vote in favor, and according to the UN Charter, if any permanent member of the Security Council votes against a resolution or vetoes it, that resolution cannot be adopted.
And then, those who raise a false anti-Russian hysteria, Armenia has appealed to the CSTO under Article 2 of the charter, not Article 4, which means aggression against any member of the CSTO.
So, if the Nikol government does not consider the invasion of Azerbaijani troops into Armenia's sovereign territory, the killing of a contractual serviceman, and the abduction of 6 soldiers from the area under the protection of the armed forces as aggression, why do you want the CSTO or Russia to consider it on your behalf?
But since for Nikol and his supporters everyone is to blame, including the Dalai Lama, but not themselves, I consider my final question purely rhetorical."