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Part of heavy artillary in Akhalkalaki will be transported to Giyumr

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  • Part of heavy artillary in Akhalkalaki will be transported to Giyumr

    AZG Armenian Daily #100, 02/06/2005


    Region

    PART OF HEAVY ARTILLERY IN AKHALKALAKI WILL BE TRANSPORTED TO GYUMRI

    Russia and Georgia Decide, Armenia Plays an 'Outpost'

    Georgian foreign minister did not exclude that part of military equipment in
    Russian 62d base of Akhalkalaki will be transported to Armenia. "We did
    everything possible to convey the major part of the equipment to Russia. But
    we do not exclude that part of the equipment will be distributed in the
    territory of Armenia where necessary infrastructures exist", Novosti agency
    quoted minister Salome Zurabishvili as saying. Earlier the foreign minister
    told BBC about the possibility of ammunition transportation to Armenia
    adding that Armenia is no threat for Georgia.

    On May 30, Russian and Georgian foreign ministers signed a joint statement
    of withdrawing the 12th base of Batumi and the 62d of Akhalkalaki by the
    year 2008. The sides agreed on starting the removal this year. The base of
    Akhalkalaki is first to be removed. 40 unites of armored vehicles, including
    20 tanks, will get out of Akhalkalaki by September of the current year. By
    the end of 2006 there will remain no heavy artillery in Akhalkalaki, and the
    base will eventually close in October 1 of 2007.

    Russian-Georgian agreement came for many as a surprised. Georgian President
    hailed the event as "historic". The joint statement points out that "the
    bases will stop functioning to their purpose" from May 30.

    Russian Commersant wrote that the equipment of Batumi base will head for its
    new destination via sea and the ammunition of Akhalkalaki base will be
    transported to Gyumri on "trailers". On May 23 President Vladimir Putin
    said, according to Interfax, "We have to create necessary conditions for the
    withdrawal of our forces be it to Russia or any other place".

    Under "other place" Putin obviously meant Armenia. Earlier on May 19 head of
    Russia's armed forces Yuri Baluyevski said that part of the heavy artillery
    of Georgia's Russian bases will settle in Armenia. While in Yerevan Dmitri
    Medvedev, chief of Russian President's administration, answered a question
    concerning the transportation of Russian military equipment to Armenia,
    "That's a complex issue, one that needs first to be discussed by Russia and
    Georgia. But there are aspects that we would like to discuss with other
    neighbors as well".

    This statement by Medvedev cannot but be viewed as offensive for a sovereign
    state as Armenia. It turns out that Russia, preparing to convey its military
    equipment, precisely rusty weapons of Soviet times, considers it first of
    all an issue for Moscow and Tbilisi to discuss. Medvedev's "other neighbors"
    is undoubtedly a hint at Azerbaijan, which raises an alarm that Moscow keeps
    on arming aggressor Armenia.

    Meanwhile official Yerevan keeps silent about the issue of conveying Russian
    equipment from Georgia to Gyumri. In this situation either Russia follows
    its own wishes while using Armenia's territory for its military aims, or
    Armenia greets stationing of old Russian equipment in its territory. The
    first variant seems more possible. Cooperation with Russia is certainly one
    of the primary elements of Armenia's safety. But Moscow visibly misuses the
    reality called Armenian-Russian strategic cooperation.

    By Tatoul Hakobian
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