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Agency questions Armenia's readiness to become NATO partner

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  • Agency questions Armenia's readiness to become NATO partner

    Agency questions Armenia's readiness to become NATO partner

    Mediamax news agency, Yerevan
    14 Sep 04

    It was announced on 6 September during Armenian President Robert
    Kocharyan's official visit to Poland that Yerevan would send about 50
    military specialists to serve as part of the Polish contingent in Iraq.

    [Passage omitted: quotes Polish president, Armenian defence minister]

    The news about the forthcoming dispatch of military specialists to
    Iraq caused mixed reaction in Armenia though it first became known
    about Yerevan's intention to contribute to the peacekeeping operation
    in this country in August 2003.

    The main reason of this mixed reaction, most likely, lies in the
    fact that nobody wants to clearly explain to the people why Armenia,
    the only country in the South Caucasus not included in the anti-Iraq
    coalition, has decided to send its military specialists to Iraq. For
    instance, the authorities of Georgia, which is going to increase
    the number of its servicemen in Iraq to 300 in the near future,
    sincerely state that in such a way they fulfil their commitments
    before the United States. Representatives of official Baku are also
    making similar statements. As to Armenia, the decision to dispatch
    peacekeepers to Iraq was not accompanied by any PR-support and this,
    of course, tells upon the public perception.

    [Passage omitted: background information; reported speculations about
    Armenian general's statement]

    Armenia's rapprochement with NATO, and as a result, Armenian officers'
    training at US military academies will sooner or later lead to
    a situation when representatives of Western and Russian military
    schools within the Defence Ministry will begin "conflicting" with each
    other. And if rapprochement with NATO continues, those few officers
    who study in the United States today will have much more opportunities
    for professional and career growth than dozens of their colleagues
    who graduate from Russian military academies every year.

    It is natural that this kind of situation can bring about a gap
    between the disposition of the officers who are going to become the
    new Armenian military elite. The older generation of the officers and
    their younger colleagues having studied in Russia, whether they want
    it or not, continue to perceive NATO as a potential enemy. Unsettled
    Armenian-Turkish relations only heat up these moods. On the other
    hand, the officers trained in the United States admire the power of
    the US military machine and are disposed correspondingly. Such state
    of affairs can be considered normal for any country going through a
    transition period. However, already today it is necessary to think
    about how to minimize the possible risk and to create a homogeneous
    officers' staff.

    [Passage omitted: quotes a Russian political expert]

    As to the suppositions of the Armenian deputy defence minister [Yuriy
    Khachaturov] that the parliament of the country might not ratify the
    agreement on sending the Armenian contingent to Iraq, most likely this
    is groundless. At any rate, last June the Armenian National Assembly
    without any problems ratified an Armenian-Kuwaiti agreement on the
    status of Armenian armed forces in Kuwait. The agreement outlines
    procedures for the presence of Armenian servicemen in this country
    before being dispatched to Iraq.

    It is natural that the dispatch of Armenian military specialists is
    fraught with a threat to their lives. However, first, every man who
    has become a professional serviceman knows that at any time he might
    have to risk his life. And, second, many people think that Western
    values, integration into Europe, contribution to the world security are
    only words. In reality, one should go a thorny path full of unpopular
    decisions to achieve all these. And today we must answer the question:
    Is Armenia ready for this?
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