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Hetq.Am: Leonid Azgaldyan, A Soldier Of Independence

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  • Hetq.Am: Leonid Azgaldyan, A Soldier Of Independence

    LEONID AZGALDYAN, A SOLDIER OF INDEPENDENCE
    Edik Baghdasaryan

    http://hetq.am/eng/special/9813/video-leonid-azgaldyan-a-soldier-of-independence.html
    June 21, 2012

    In Karabakh in 1991, a foreign journalist asked Liberation Army
    Commander Leonid Azgaldyan, "What color are you? I mean, what political
    party do you belong to?" Leonid knelt down, scooped up a handful of
    earth and said, "Here, this is my color."

    On June 21, 1992, Commander Leonid Azgaldyan was killed near the
    village of Tonashen in the Martakert region. In an enemy ambush, the
    commander's car drove off the road in a hail of gunfire. His driver,
    Pavlik Tadevosyan, managed to leap out the car and escape. The
    circumstances of Leonid's death remain a mystery until now. His
    comrade-in-arms, Sargis Hatspanyan, says, "Leonid was the victim of
    treacherous bullets."

    The Karabakh Movement originated in 1988 and attracted hundreds of
    thousands of Armenians to the Opera Square. For many, the Karabakh
    struggle meant going to Opera Square; for some it meant making
    speeches there. At the time, Leonid was already warning friends that
    the struggle would turn into an armed conflict and that people should
    be prepared. And he was getting prepared. Leonid's apartment turned
    into a laboratory where he and his friends tested different weapons.

    Then he gathered like-minded people and began studying and teaching
    how to be a soldier.

    Leonid was born in Tbilisi in 1942. Some time later his family moved to
    Yerevan. He was a physicist by training, graduating from the Physics
    Department of the Yerevan State University and working at various
    scientific institutions.

    At the beginning of the Karabakh Movement he found himself on the
    front line of the struggle. From February 1990 he was the commander
    of a military unit called the Liberation Army. He organized the
    self-defense of a number of regions and participated in the first
    liberation battles.

    In 1991, he and his friends founded a military organization called
    the Independence Army. He served as its commander-in-chief till the
    end of his life.

    "Until now, we have only surrendered our lands to enemies and the
    nation's psychology has been such that the spirit of resistance
    has languished. This comes from the fact that those who make up our
    nation's intellectuals are poor in spirit; they don't know how to
    struggle. And here are, in fact, our nations outposts - Getashen,
    Shahumyan, Artsakh, Zangezur. They are under direct threat of
    destruction, and these are not empty words, this is true. At any
    moment, a small well-organized force might attack, cut the roads off,
    and repeat 1915," Leonid Azgaldyan said in a March 1991 interview.

    In those years, Azerbaijani military groupings supported by the
    Soviet Army were launching attacks on various Armenian settlements in
    Karabakh and in the Shahumyan region. Leonid's detachment organized
    the self-defense of these settlements.

    "In the process a selection was made, only those stayed who came to
    defend their land, who truly understood that not a single inch of
    land could be surrendered, that it was, in fact, Armenia. Whatever
    international or national figures say, this is Armenia. Period. No one
    can say that it is not Armenia. No one has the right to put it up for
    sale, to exchange or surrender it. No idea can justify the surrender
    of Shahumyan, Getashen, Artsakh," Leonid said in the same interview.

    There is no place in Karabakh where people don't know Leonid. Before
    he received an award from the government, he was decorated by the
    people. His photographs are displayed in all Artsakh schools and
    state institutions.

    [h-0406-azgaldyan-2.jpg]

    "We are creating efficient military camps here. We select from
    among the local boys those who are gifted militarily, and we train
    them according to a special program; we create groups of commandos
    for special assignments. Our Army is based on ideas of national
    rehabilitation, independence, fulfillment of national aspirations,"
    Leonid said.

    There were several Diaspora Armenians in his detachment, a fact that
    Leonid found inspiring. "It is no accident that Armenians gather here
    who understand the meaning of the nation's struggle. The presence of
    guys from the Diaspora here is an important source of inspiration,
    from a spiritual point of view. One guy's being in the camp, in
    itself, attracts others. People realize that their work is not in
    vain, that this is a pan-national cause, that we are indeed right,
    and that's why Armenians from very distant countries come and stand
    side-by-side with us and say, we are going to fight here."

    In 1991 the Soviet Army and Azerbaijani military groupings were
    the masters of the situation in the Shahumyan region. Under these
    circumstances, Leonid and his comrades managed to carry out the
    self-defense of Armenian villages.

    The Liberation Army stood out compared to other military detachments
    for its discipline. In the course of four years and dozens of battles,
    Leonid lost six only soldiers. He trained his soldiers to be ready for
    every hardship. Smoking and drinking were strictly prohibited. There
    was no other detachment like this in Karabakh. His boys trained for
    eight hours a day. He was preparing soldiers for a regular army.

    Before combat he would always order, "Don't shoot at unarmed people,"
    and would add, "Don't shoot at fleeing soldiers either. Let them go."

    He gave that order the day the military station near the village
    of Aghdaban was destroyed. That same day the Azerbaijanis came and
    massacred the peaceful residents of the village of Maragha. Leonid
    and his unit rushed to Maragha. The enemy suffered heavy losses and
    retreated, leaving behind the villagers they had killed, dozens of
    mutilated bodies of children, women, and old people.

    Leonid admired the natural beauty of Karabakh and said, "Armenians have
    no sense of beauty; if they had they wouldn't have given up Karabakh,
    for that reason alone. Giving something so beautiful away to somebody
    else is a crime."

    Leonid's dream was to create a national army with a powerful Armenian
    state behind it. But the Army was taking shape slowly at that time.

    When we last met (it was after the opening of the Lachin corridor)
    he said, "These victories will come to nothing because there is no
    regular army behind them."

    He could not reconcile himself to the surrender of the Shahumyan
    region and parts of Martakert after the opening of the Lachin road.

    The fact that some soldiers left these regions before the residents
    did filled Leonid with rage. He said that they should be punished. He
    was planning to liberate Shahumyan with his soldiers.

    Leonid's best friend and his favorite soldier was the commander of
    the Artsakh Front unit of the Liberation Army, Vladimir Balayan.

    Leonid considered Vladimir a born military expert. Vladimir Balayan
    was killed on June 9, 1992 defending the village of Chailu in the
    Martakert region. That day Leonid's soldiers saw their commander
    crying like a baby for the first and last time.

    "He was killed, he went to the gods because they needed him there.

    Therefore, we have to defend our country so that he doesn't become
    a martyr. He is a victim, not a martyr," Leonid told the people who
    gathered for the funeral.

    After Vladimir's funeral, he didn't speak to anybody for two hours;
    he just stood by himself. Then he waved his hand and said, "I'll go
    and meet Vladimir there - in heaven."

    Twelve days later Leonid Azgaldyan was killed.

    On different occasions, Leonid used say, "The nation that loses
    Karabakh will be completely overthrown."

    Photos by Frederic Karegin Tonolli, Myriam Gaume Guragossian, Sarkis
    Hatspanian


    From: Baghdasarian
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