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  • Armenia chums up with NATO

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    January 14, 2005, Friday


    ARMENIA CHUMS UP WITH NATO

    SOURCE: Voyenno-Promyshlenny Kurier, No 1, January 12 - 18, 2005, p.
    3

    by Samvel Martirosjan

    Meeting of the working team of the NATO Military Committee took place
    in Yerevan in December 2004. Representatives of 34 states, (23 NATO
    members and 11 partners) attended it. Ukraine and Georgia represented
    the Commonwealth.

    The meeting reiterates the assumption that the Alliance is keeping
    Armenia in the focus of its close attention. Co-operation between
    Brussels and Yerevan was on purely familiarization terms for years,
    until last year in fact when the former Soviet republic began an
    active drift towards integration into structures of what once had
    been the enemy of the Soviet Union. NATO ran its Co-operative Best
    Effort exercise in Armenia in summer 2003. In 2004, it cancelled a
    similar exercise in Azerbaijan because the local authorities refused
    to permit Armenian servicemen to participate.

    By the way, activities of the working team of the NATO Military
    Committee in Yerevan may be viewed as another meaningful gesture. At
    first, meetings were planned in all capitals of the southern part of
    the Caucasus. Azerbaijan however, refused to deal with the Armenian
    delegation and Brussels decided that official Baku had to be
    punished.

    In the meantime, co-operation between Yerevan and the Alliance is
    broadening. In 2004, representatives of the Armenian Defense Ministry
    participated in approximately 40 functions (including five exercises)
    within the framework of the NATO's Partnership for Peace Program. In
    2005, Russia's ally in the Caucasus intends to participate in 50
    functions (including eight exercises).

    The same rapprochement can be seen on the political plane as well.
    The Armenian National Assembly ratified a number of documents that
    provide a legal basis for broader co-operation with NATO. Another
    document is being worked on because Yerevan volunteered to join the
    Individual Partnership Action Plan in 2004. Twenty-three objectives
    of this partnership were discussed and adopted within the framework
    of PARP consultations in Brussels (19 1 i.e. NATO plus Armenia).

    Armenia began participating in NATO peacekeeping operations in 2004.
    A platoon of Armenian servicemen (subunit of the Greek contingent)
    set out for Kosovo on February 13. Scheduled rotation of the unit
    took place on September 8.

    Yerevan wants more than that. Addressing the NATO Military Committee,
    Deputy Defense Minister Lieutenant General Arthur Agabekjan announced
    that his country intends to form a peacekeeping contingent in line
    with NATO standards for fully-fledged participation in exercises and
    peacekeeping operations within the framework of the NATO's
    Partnership for Peace Program. "It will enable us to form units
    compatible with NATO troops,' Agabekjan said, "They will be able to
    perform all sorts of missions and participate in peacekeeping
    operations."

    "Armenian-NATO relations moved to a wholly new plane. We are
    advancing them in accordance with the policy of European integration
    and on the basis of mutual trust and mutual welfare," Agabekjan
    continued. The officer proceeded to air the official opinion that
    Yerevan's interest in co-operation with Brussels was a corollary of
    its long-term plans to build statehood and security. Armenia proceeds
    towards integration with the European security framework but the lack
    of stability in the southern part of the Caucasus interferes with the
    process, Agabekjan said. "Our suggestions on co-operation in the
    sphere of defense are negated by Azerbaijan that always comes up with
    conditions and sometimes even ultimatums," Agabekjan said. This
    tactic preferred by official Baku collides with the spirit of
    European security and does not align with NATO's position.

    Serzh Sarkisjan, Defense Minister and Secretary of the Security
    Council, brought up the same subject several days later. Sarkisjan
    emphasized in his program statement that membership in NATO was not
    on the Armenian foreign political agenda. "At the same time, our
    country takes a pragmatic look on the situation in the region.
    Instead of coming up with untimely statements, we develop relations
    with the Alliance systematically. From this point of view, it will
    not be wrong to say that the Armenian-NATO relations play their own
    important role in the system of national security, "Sarkisjan said.
    According to the minister, Armenia follows the road of European
    development and NATO is the central institution of European security.

    As far as Euro integration is concerned, the minister's opinion does
    not differ from the major social tendencies in Armenia. Results of
    the opinion poll conducted by the Center of National and Strategic
    Studies indicate that 64% of the population and 92% of experts would
    like to see Armenia a member of the European Union.

    Back to Sarkisjan. The minister outlined the frontiers of
    co-operation with the Alliance. "... It should be noted that
    relations with NATO will develop unless some serious discord between
    our international obligations crops up," he said. "I'd like to point
    out therefore that the Charter of the Organization of the CIS
    Collective Security Treaty does not restrict its member's freedom of
    co-operation with foreign countries and international organizations.
    At the same time, undeniable rapprochement of the positions of the
    Organization and the Alliance on a number of issues and presence of
    common threats and problems permits me to say that the potential of
    development of our relations with NATO is quite considerable. It will
    not be a mistake to say that co-operation within the framework of the
    Organization of the CIS Collective Security Treaty and co-operation
    with NATO are mutually complementary since they create additional
    guarantees of security for Armenia and the region as such."

    Sarkisjan emphasized it is the Armenian-Russian relations that
    maintain military security and regional parity. The minister referred
    to the CIS United Antiaircraft Defense System to illustrate. "Along
    with that, strategic relations between Armenia and Russia cannot
    serve as an obstacle to the process of Armenian Euro integration.
    Moreover, the Russia-EU rapprochement enables Armenia to combine
    these two priorities, perfecting our national security and the
    regional security framework as such," Sarkisjan said.

    Translated by A. Ignatkin
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