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  • BAKU:Existence of Russia's radar station in Azerbaijan in question

    Existence of Russia's radar station in Azerbaijan in question

    Nezavisimaya Gazeta, Moscow
    29 Nov 04


    The Russian-leased Qabala radar station in Azerbaijan may close down,
    if the US plans against Iran come true, Russia's Nezavisimaya Gazeta
    has suggested. Intentions by Azerbaijan's Ministry of Ecology and
    Natural Resources to monitor the station's impact on the environment
    and an inquiry by the MP from the ruling party on whether ethnic
    Armenian officers serve at the station "could hardly happen without
    the nod from the top", paper said. It quoted "informed sources" as
    saying that Azerbaijan's Defence Ministry had initiated the campaign
    for the closure of the radar station. However, this scenario is
    unlikely in the near future as Russia "has a few secret levers of
    influence on Azerbaijan's leadership". The following is a text of
    report by Rauf Mirqadirov in Russian newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta on
    29 November headlined " The fate of the last Russian military base in
    Azerbaijan in question"; subheadings have been inserted editorially:

    MPs and ecologists demand closure of radar station

    The Azerbaijani parliament demands that the Qabala radar station [in
    northern Azerbaijan] be closed down.

    The rumours being persistently spread in Azerbaijan, that the
    appearance on Azerbaijani territory of US military bases is in the
    offing, have made the topic of the withdrawal of Russian installations
    from the territory of Azerbaijan timely. The threat applies to the
    only Russian military installation remaining in the country, the
    Qabala radar station. The issue of modifying the lease terms for this
    station has already been raised more than once in Azerbaijan's
    parliament.

    The country's Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources has announced
    its intention to monitor the impact of the station's electromagnetic
    emissions on nature and human health. Right after that, the press
    service of the Russian Space Troops issued a statement that the radar
    station's impact on the environment did not exceed the established
    standards. But the reports of various local ecological organizations
    assert the exact opposite. Let us note that, in fact, all these
    organizations exist on the grants by Western foundations, above all US
    ones.

    On the basis of the research conducted, the ecologists claim that the
    electromagnetic emissions from the Qabala radar station have an
    adverse effect both on the environment and human health. In an
    interview with a Nezavisimaya Gazeta correspondent, the director of
    the Ecological Prognosis Centre, Telman Zeynalov, has said that "even
    such representatives of wildlife as bees and snails, which are
    resistant to electromagnetic emissions, have died out in this
    region". The research also showed that a percentage of female
    barrenness and male impotence has risen in this region. Moreover, as
    the ecologists claim, the settlement where the Russian soldiers live
    is not exposed to the radiation, since it is [already] situated in a
    so-called "dead zone."

    MPs, largely from the ruling party, are involved in the campaign to
    get rid of the radar station as well. That could hardly happen without
    the nod from the top. MP Cahangir Huseynov has inquired the minister
    of defence about whether ethnic Armenian officers are actually serving
    at the Qabala radar station. In the deputy's opinion, that is
    unacceptable, even if these officers are citizens of Russia. His
    statement immediately received the support of both his parliamentary
    colleagues and a significant part of society.

    Defence Ministry reportedly initiated the campaign for closure

    We have learned from informed sources that the leadership of the
    Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence has initiated a new campaign for the
    closure of the Qabala radar station. Formally, the whole problem is
    that the decision of leasing the Qabala radar station to Russia was
    supposedly made without taking into account the opinion of the
    ministry which, as a source in the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defence
    claims, was against this agreement. But the fact that the Azerbaijani
    Ministry of Defence is behind this campaign suggests a lot in
    itself. After all, Azerbaijani Defence Minister Safar Abiyev has long
    been known as an official who always does everything looking at the
    USA.

    Of course, supposedly under pressure from internal and, most
    importantly, several external factors official Baku may start talks
    with Russia on the closure of the military installation. "The
    electronic part of the station can be dismantled and taken away. But
    it is not this already obsolete equipment that is of most value, but
    the building itself as an engineering facility that provides the
    electromagnetic emissions. It cannot be dismantled. It can be blown
    up, that is destroyed, as was done to a similar station in Latvia,"
    believes Casur Mammadov, independent military expert.

    The point is not even that Russia did not completely pay off the debts
    for the use and energy supply to the Qabala radar station before
    signing the 10-year lease agreement that came into effect in
    2002. Russia pays only 7m dollars a year to lease the station. At the
    same time, Moscow obligated itself to pay off the debt of 30m dollars
    for the energy supply to the station between 1992 and 2002, which it
    is not yet doing.

    Azerbaijan has the necessary legal grounds to start the talks on the
    closure of the Qabala radar station. Let us begin with the idea that
    nearly a year ago, Azerbaijan adopted a law on national security that
    unequivocally prohibits the deployment of foreign military bases on
    the country's territory.

    Radar station is formally information analysis centre

    Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov has told Nezavisimaya
    Gazeta that the Qabala radar station is operating on the basis of the
    leasing contract concluded between the two states, and it would be
    wrong to consider it a military base. According to an interpretation
    of the parties, the Qabala radar station is an information analysis
    centre leased by Russia on the basis of the intergovernment
    agreements, he said.

    At any moment, the Azerbaijani side may classify the Qabala radar
    station as a foreign military base and begin negotiations to close it
    down.

    US-Russian agreements on closing down former Soviet radar stations not
    fulfilled in Qabala

    The point is that in the last three decades, the Soviet Union and the
    USA, and then Russia and the USA have signed a series of agreements on
    strategic weapons (SALT 1 and SALT 2 treaties), strategic offensive
    weapons (START 1 and START 2 treaties) and missile defence systems
    (ABM Treaty). "These agreements envisioned not only curtailing
    missiles with nuclear warheads, but also closing down some of the
    early warning radar stations, including the Qabala radar station,
    along with the Latvian one. After the radar station in Latvia was
    blown up, the parties `forgot' about Qabala, apparently `by mutual
    agreement'. In any case, the provision of the ABM agreement on closing
    down the Qabala radar station was not fulfilled, although the parties
    did not officially abandon it. That is to say, today the USA formally
    has the full right to demand that Russia fulfil this point," expert
    Mammadov claims.

    So formally the Azerbaijani side has sufficient grounds to initiate
    the start of the negotiations on the closure of the Qabala radar
    station. But why start talking about this right now?

    US and Russian military's co-existence in Azerbaijan unlikely

    A political analyst, Matin Rasadoglu, believes, that actually it is
    unlikely that US servicemen, regardless of under what pretext they are
    to be deployed in Azerbaijan, can "be neighbours" to the Russian
    servicemen. Reports recently appeared in the Western press that
    Washington had begun consultations with official Baku on the
    possibility of using the territory of Azerbaijan for delivering
    strikes against Iran. If we take into account that Moscow will hardly
    want to support this undertaking by Washington, the fate of the Qabala
    radar station is obvious: the USA will not allow a "hostile" radar
    station to operate in its rear.

    The expert believes that developments of this kind are more than
    realistic: "Suffice it to recall that right after the appearance of
    the abovementioned reports on delivering strikes against Iran using
    Azerbaijani territory, Iran's Minister of Foreign Affairs [Kamal]
    Kharrazi announced Tehran's consent to all the IAEA [International
    Atomic Energy Agency] conditions to suspend the programme to enrich
    uranium. In the last month, Iranian President [Mohammad] Khatami has
    called [Azerbaijani President] Ilham Aliyev twice. Just before that,
    Tehran at last made a decision on the opening Azerbaijan's consulate
    in Tabriz [northwestern Iran predominantly populated by ethnic
    Azeris], although this question had not been resolved for 10 years. In
    that way Iran, on one hand, is bowing to official Baku, and, on the
    other, is trying to sound out the intentions of Azerbaijan's
    leadership".

    At the same time, the closure of the radar station will not happen
    very soon, since Ilham Aliyev "very much `looks towards' Russia." In
    the opinion of experts, [Russian President Vladimir] Putin has a few
    secret levers of influence on Azerbaijan's leadership.
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