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Armenian Generals Unhappy With Iraq Deployment

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  • Armenian Generals Unhappy With Iraq Deployment

    Armenian Generals Unhappy With Iraq Deployment
    By Gevorg Stamboltsian 09/09/2004 09:12

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    Sept 9 2004

    Two senior Armenian army generals have indicated their opposition to
    Yerevan's plans to join the U.S.-led occupation force in Iraq with
    a small unit of non-combat troops by the end of this year.

    "I am not delighted with the decision to send our troops there and
    the war in general," Lieutenant-General Yuri Khachaturov, a deputy
    minister of defense, told reporters late on Tuesday. "Because of
    that the Armenian community [in Iraq] and Armenians in general could
    have problems in the future." Khachaturov's concerns were echoed
    on Wednesday by Major-General Enrico Apriamov, deputy chief of staff
    of Armenia's Armed Forces. "I can't comment on this because there is
    an issue of peace keeping and an issue of aggression," he said. "As
    peacekeepers, we are ready to perform duties to our people for the
    sake of our homeland."

    Asked whether he believes the U.S. invasion of Iraq was aggression,
    Apriamov replied, "This question should be put to President George
    Bush. [He should be asked] what he meant by sending troops to Iraq. I
    am a military officer and am against war."

    The comments are a rare expression of personal views by members of
    the Armenian army's top brass and expose its serious misgivings about
    the deployment plans reaffirmed by President Robert Kocharian during
    a visit to Poland on Monday.

    Kocharian formally offered his Polish counterpart Aleksander
    Kwasniewski to send some 50 military doctors, sappers and truck drivers
    to south central Iraq administered by a Polish-led multinational
    division. Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian accompanying Kocharian
    argued that considers itself a "part of the European family" and feels
    "obliged to participate in the efforts to assure security."

    The offer was accepted by and drew praise from the Polish government.
    "Such decisions are very difficult, but necessary at the time of the
    joint struggle against terrorism," Kwasniewski said.

    Lieutenant-General Artur Aghabekian, another deputy defense minister
    seen as Sarkisian's right-hand man, told RFE/RL late last week that
    a team of Armenian military officials will visit Iraq this month to
    prepare for the arrival of the Armenian troops. He said they will join
    the Polish-led contingent "at the end of the autumn or the beginning
    of the winter."

    Khachaturov claimed that the Armenian parliament may still block
    the deployment by refusing to ratify it. His comments also give more
    weight to fears that Armenia's accession to the U.S.-led "coalition
    of the willing" could make thousands of ethnic Armenians living in
    Iraq a potential target of attacks by anti-American insurgents.
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