Earlier, Azerbaijani media published a series of
materials consisting of video recordings where the former
Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Luis Moreno Ocampo,
and his circle effectively exposed themselves while discussing an
anti-Azerbaijan campaign. The takeaway from these revelations is
clear: this is not about "values" or "principles," but a systematic
pressure mechanism built with the involvement of the Armenian
lobby, European politicians, and financial flows linked to
Russian-Armenian business circles.
Ocampo speaks openly about his connections in the European
Parliament, mentioning Josep Borrell’s circle and Borrell himself,
and describes without hesitation the mechanisms for influencing EU
decisions—even pressure on the European Commission. Simultaneously,
financial mechanisms have come to light: initially, funds arrived
from Armenian sources, later joined by a group of sponsors
consisting of wealthy diaspora representatives, primarily from
Russia. According to our information, these include Samvel
Karapetyan and Ruben Vardanyan. The core principle of the operation
is anonymity and acting through closed schemes.
Furthermore, individual episodes point to interference in
Armenia's internal processes—extending even to the discussion of
regime change scenarios. Consequently, what we see is not just
lobbying, but a multi-level media, political, and financial
operation aimed both against Baku and at undermining regional
stability.
Last week, official inquiries were sent to European structures,
including the European Parliament, to clarify Luis Ocampo's
possible links with European institutions and Josep Borrell’s
circle, as well as to ask whether investigations had been conducted
into possible lobbying, conflicts of interest, and corruption risks
reflected in the videos. They were also asked if the European
Parliament is prepared to launch an official investigation.
Sufficient time has passed—there is no answer. Brussels understands
the essence of the matter well but prefers not to comment.
These same European structures, which usually react instantly
to any information regarding Azerbaijan, have taken a wait-and-see
approach. However, we will send a follow-up inquiry—either to
secure an official reaction or to prove once again that they have
nothing to say.
Today, new materials have been presented in the
Azerbaijani media, once again completely unmasking
Ocampo:
Luis Moreno Ocampo: "...the next step for
me is to see how I can organize this on a platform that will use
artificial intelligence to implement it properly. So, I am working
on a project related to AI with the University of São Paulo, in the
Faculty of Physics. And now I have spent time in Spain with some
friends who have connections with such companies. We were
discussing the Armenia project as a pilot for a company using
AI."
Luis Moreno Ocampo: "If we are going to
talk about this... it is something completely different. I don't
want to scare you, but I do a lot of work. I am also a professor at
the University of São Paulo in Brazil. I work with a physicist,
[...] in the field of physics. We use mostly modern physics... and
AI to model and try to organize global order and global disorder.
So, Brazil funds this. We have supercomputers working on it. At
first, we focused well; initially, we said, 'let’s work on global
order in general.' Then we said, 'no, that’s too complex, let’s
deal with genocide.' And then we said, 'let’s deal with
Nagorno-Karabakh,' because I have a lot of information. We are
working on Nagorno-Karabakh. Now I see this as an academic product;
it’s an academic project, and I must get the maximum benefit out of
it. So, I am trying to build a company that crosses borders,
turning the information we produce here into a form that reaches
politicians and decision-makers. To be more visible, it must reach
mainstream media and social media. It must also reach other
academics so that it is solid and well-founded."
Interlocutor: "But you are developing a
program that uses AI?"
Luis Moreno Ocampo: "Yes, yes."
Interlocutor: "Because there are programs
and think-tanks that come together to advise decision-makers. These
have existed for a long time."
Luis Moreno Ocampo: "Yes, yes."
Ocampo speaks of collaboration with the University of São Paulo,
the use of supercomputers, and attempts to model "global order" via
artificial intelligence. However, more importantly, he directly
points to Karabakh as one of the main directions, evaluating it as
a "product from which maximum benefit must be obtained."
He then discusses creating a transnational company aimed at
turning "produced information" into a tool for influencing
decision-makers—pushing necessary narratives through media, social
networks, and expert circles.
In fact, we are talking about an attempt to industrialize
informational and political attacks—dressing them in "scientific"
garb and scaling them through technology.