Английская Википедия:Battle of Lachin

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Шаблон:Infobox military conflict Шаблон:Campaignbox First Nagorno-Karabakh War

The Battle of Lachin was a military operation during the Karabakh war, undertaken by the National Army of Azerbaijan in order to regain control over the Lachin corridor, controlled by the army of the unrecognized NKR since May 18, 1992.[1] It was one of the most fierce battles in this direction that unfolded in the autumn of that year.

Background

The autumn of 1992 was the culmination of Azerbaijan's military successes. At some point, the Azerbaijanis captured the village of Syrkhavend north of Stepanakert and the road to the east of the city and were preparing to regain control of the Lachin corridor. The Ministry of Defense in Baku planned to send a convoy of buses there to evacuate the Armenian civilian population from the territories that Azerbaijan was going to occupy.[2]

In an interview with the newspaper "Khural" in March 2014, Suret Huseynov, who commanded one of the advancing groups of Azerbaijan, commenting on the operation, recalls: Шаблон:Blockquote

Battle

On October 1, 1992, units of the 2nd Army Corps of Azerbaijan under the command of Major General Dadash Rzayev launched an offensive from the village of Muradkhanly in the north of the Gubadli region,[3] located south of Lachin. The second grouping of Azerbaijani troops was attacking Lachin from the northwest. By inflicting converging strikes from the south and north of Lachin, the Azerbaijanis planned to pincer the Armenian troops and, having taken control of the city itself, gradually restore control over the entire Lachin region. If the operation was successful, the Armenian troops in Nagorno-Karabakh would be cut off from Armenia.[4]

At the end of September 1992, the 1st Deputy Minister of Defense of Armenia, Lieutenant-General Hrach Andreasyan, who took command of the Armenian troops in the region of the Lachin corridor, took measures to create a stable active defense, the concentration of the Armenian group on the border of the Shusha and Gubadli regions began to strike at the right flank of the advancing on Lachin from the south of the Azerbaijani group.[5]

After fierce fighting on October 3–6, Azerbaijani troops approached Lachin from the south, in several places they managed to establish fire control over the Lachin corridor, as a result, Armenian communications in the corridor zone were practically cut. The units advancing from the north came close to Lachin at a distance of 6–8 km, but the Azerbaijani troops failed to completely take control of the Stepanakert-Goris road running through Lachin and Shusha, as well as occupy the city itself.[6]

Having exhausted the Azerbaijanis in defensive battles, on October 8, the Armenian troops launched a counteroffensive and from the direction of the Shusha region struck at the right flank of the Azerbaijani troops advancing from the south. Having made a gap in the right flank of the Azerbaijani troops advancing on Lachin from Gubadli, the Armenians managed to penetrate deep into the main forces of the Azerbaijani group and widen this gap. The Armenian units that attacked from the territory of Armenia across the state border line managed to expand the corridor to the south.[7]

The Armenian counteroffensive and a breakthrough to the rear led to the disorganization of the Azerbaijani troops and the loss of command and control of the troops. During October 9–12, 1992, Armenian troops managed to push back the Azerbaijanis from Lachin. On October 12, 1992, the Armenian troops, developing the offensive, reached the border of the Gubadli region, where they were stopped near the village of Muradkhanli.[8] To divert the Azerbaijani forces from Lachin, the Armenians carried out a number of operations - they attacked Aghdam, and also landed a helicopter landing force (40 people) in northern Karabakh occupied by Azerbaijanis, two kilometers from the Sarsang reservoir.[9]

References

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