Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

AAA: Armenia This Week - 01/18/2005

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • AAA: Armenia This Week - 01/18/2005

    ARMENIA THIS WEEK

    Tuesday, January 18, 2005

    In this issue:

    U.S. Ambassador says Armenia relations in "very good shape"

    More talks on Karabakh amid major crackdown in Azeri army



    U.S. ENVOY SEES ARMENIA RELATIONS IN "VERY GOOD SHAPE"

    The United States Ambassador to Armenia John Evans this week applauded
    Armenia's deployment with the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq, adding that
    "Armenian-American relations are in very good shape.... In particular,
    our security relationship is growing in a very positive way." Evans
    spoke as he joined Armenia's Defense Minister Serge Sargsian in a
    seeing-off ceremony for the Armenian peacekeepers. The 46-person task
    force comprising transportation, de-mining and medical personnel flew to
    Kuwait on a U.S. C-130 Hercules this Tuesday and will later this month
    join the Polish-led multinational division south of Baghdad. The
    transportation and de-mining personnel are expected to be based with a
    Polish transportation battalion in Al-Hilla and doctors will work at a
    coalition hospital in Karbala.



    Evans added that the United States appreciated that Armenia's decision
    "was not an easy one." A large majority of the Armenia's public are
    concerned that the move might lead to more attacks against the Armenian
    communities in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East. Over the last
    year, Armenians and other Christians in Iraq have come under repeated
    attacks. Despite these concerns, however, the Armenian government was
    able to win strong parliamentary support last month arguing that the
    deployment was important for Armenia's international stature.



    This week Sargsian reiterated Armenia's desire to help the international
    community to stabilize Iraq. "We have chosen the most necessary way of
    helping the Iraqi people: medical treatment, de-mining and cargo
    shipments that pursue the noble task of saving human lives." Evans
    expressed confidence in Armenia's contingent saying it was well
    prepared. The transportation unit's commander Major Hamlet Hovakimian
    said his men will not engage in military operations unless they come
    under attack. (Sources: Armenia This Week 1-10; Noyan Tapan 1-18; RFE/RL
    Armenia Report 1-18)



    KARABAKH TALKS DIFFICULT EVEN AS DIPLOMATS EXPRESS CUSTOMARY OPTIMISM

    Armenian and Azeri Foreign Ministers met again last week to continue
    what has since last year become to be known as the "Prague process."
    Vartan Oskanian and Elmar Mamedyarov, accompanied by their deputies, met
    in Prague together with mediators from Russia and the United States.
    Presidents of the two countries may also meet this summer (they last met
    four months ago). Armenia's Mediamax news agency observed that unlike
    the past three years since the ultimately unsuccessful Paris and Key
    West talks of 2001, there is now more optimistic official rhetoric over
    chances for progress.



    But, according to the agency, the sides appear to be speaking of
    different peace processes. While Azeri officials contend that talks
    focus on unilateral Armenian withdrawals from formerly Azeri-populated
    districts, the Armenian side insists that the thrust of the negotiations
    is where it was in 2001, formalizing Karabakh's unification with
    Armenia. The Mediamax analysis concludes, however, that considering
    public attitudes in both countries, a continued status quo will be the
    most likely mutually acceptable end result. The Azeri President Ilham
    Aliyev for his part has already stated that he "was not in a hurry to
    settle." Aliyev has instead resorted to building a pan-Islamic,
    pro-Azerbaijan, coalition at the United Nations and boosting military
    spending.



    Meanwhile, the Azeri press reported last week on a major crackdown in
    the country's military. Starting last month, dozens of army officers,
    including those in command of Azeri military units along the Line of
    Contact with Karabakh Armenian forces, have been arrested, dismissed or
    demoted. The Azeri Defense Ministry confirmed that arrests have been
    made, adding that the officers are charged with corruption. Recently
    retired Azeri military officers claim that corrupt practices in the army
    are commonplace and the officers were specifically targeted over their
    alleged disloyalty to Defense Minister General Safar Abiyev. An
    anonymous officer serving in the area indirectly confirmed this, saying
    that military investigators were extorting larger bribes than in the
    past.



    The prosecuted officers are also linked to a senior army General Rovshan
    Akperov, who is reportedly Abiyev's main rival within the ministry. Two
    senior generals close to Akperov were dismissed last year and have since
    been appointed as defense attaches in Central Asia. (Sources: Armenia
    This Week 4-9-04, 1-10; Zerkalo 1-13, 15; Mediamax 1-17)



    A WEEKLY NEWSLETTER PUBLISHED BY THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA

    122 C Street, N.W., Suite 350, Washington, D.C. 20001 (202) 393-3434 FAX
    (202) 638-4904

    E-Mail [email protected] WEB http://www.aaainc.org

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X