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  • Armenia Bets On NATO

    ARMENIA BETS ON NATO
    Samvel Martirosyan

    Eurasianet
    3/10/05

    As part of its expansion into the South Caucasus, the North Atlantic
    Treaty Organization (NATO) is taking a more active interest in
    longtime Russian ally Armenia. A visit by NATO Secretary General
    envoy Robert Simmons last month marked the high point for
    Armeniaâ~@~Ys ties with the Western defense alliance, and Yerevan
    seems eager to maintain the momentum.

    Simmonsâ~@~Y February 23-24 visit at times appeared a careful
    balancing act. In statements with Armenian Defense Minister Serge
    Sarkisian, the NATO representative took care to emphasize that
    stronger relations with NATO should not be cause for concern in
    Moscow about the countryâ~@~Ys participation in the Collective
    Security Treaty Organization, the post-Soviet defense alliance made
    up of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,Tajikistan and Russia.

    "We do not compete in the region, but are building a constructive
    partnership, including also [with] Russia, which is an active player
    in CSTO [the Collective Security Treaty Organization]," Simmons told
    reporters. "Armeniaâ~@~Ys participation in CSTO does not affect in
    any way the degree of its relationship with NATO."

    To reinforce that line, emphasis was placed on collective initiatives
    that have included Russian participation or an international focus
    â~@~S in particular, the deployment of Armenian peacekeepers to
    Kosovo and Iraq as well as contributions made by Yerevan to the
    US-backed campaign against international terrorism. A group of NATO
    consultants is scheduled to travel to Armenia to advise the Armenian
    defense ministry on various defense programs, but details of this
    assistance have not been released.

    Nonetheless, NATO has not been reticent about carving out its own
    niche in the region. In March 1 testimony before the US Senate Armed
    Services Committee, NATO Supreme Allied Commander General James Jones
    stated that the Caucasus has become a strategically important region
    for the alliance.

    "The Caucasus is increasingly important to our interests. Its air
    corridor has become a crucial lifeline between coalition forces in
    Afghanistan and our bases in Europe", said Jones. "In addition to
    maintaining our traditional lines of communication and access, we
    seek access to new facilities and routine freedom of transit to the
    Black Sea, the Caucasus, the Levant, and Africa in order to advance
    U.S. national interests."

    As part of that initiative, NATO signed a transit agreement with
    Georgia on March 2 that would allow the alliance to ferry supplies
    for its International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan via
    Georgian air space, roads and railways.

    Over the past year, Armenia has been actively developing its own
    cooperation with the collective, too. In November 2004, NATO
    Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer paid an official visit to
    Yerevan in which he described NATOâ~@~Ys relationship with Armenia as
    "developing very well, indeed." The government has turned a deaf ear
    to public protests about the deployment of peacekeeping troops to
    Iraq, and is currently at work on an Individual Partnership Action
    Plan (IPAP), reportedly scheduled for release soon, that would form a
    crucial first step toward eventual NATO membership. In September 2004
    President Robert Kocharian appointed veteran diplomat Samvel
    Mkrtchian to act as the countryâ~@~Ys representative to NATO
    headquarters in Brussels, a position previously filled by
    Armeniaâ~@~Ys Belgian ambassador.

    But more than a desire to stay on the right side of the West â~@~S a
    rising influence in the Caucasus -- could drive Armeniaâ~@~Ys NATO
    interest. A December 2004 poll by the Armenian Center for National
    and International Studies showed that most Armenians favor membership
    in both NATO and the expanding European Union. [For additional
    information, see the Eurasia Insight archive]. One opposition bloc
    â~@~S made up of the Liberal Progressive Party, the Republic Party
    and former Foreign Affairs Minister Raffi Hovannisian â~@~S has
    already been formed with the express intention of securing
    Armeniaâ~@~Ys exit from the CTSO in favor of NATO and strengthening
    Armeniaâ~@~Ys focus on the West.

    Commenting on the results of Simmonsâ~@~Y visit, Armenian Defense
    Minister Serge Sarkisian emphasized that further cooperation with the
    defense collective is in the works. "Iâ~@~Yd like to once again state
    that we are going to keep up the adopted direction and develop our
    ties," he stressed.

    That cooperation, however, has not been without its stumbling blocks.
    In June 2004, President Robert Kocharian refused to attend a NATO
    summit meeting in Istanbul, citing strained relations with Turkey, a
    NATO member state with which Armeniaâ~@~Ys dealings have long been
    acrimonious. Nor have ties with fellow Partnership for Peace member
    Azerbaijan proven particularly collegial. Much attention continues to
    focus on an Azerbaijani military officerâ~@~Ys brutal axe murder of
    an Armenian counterpart at a February 2004 Partnership for Peace
    training session in Budapest. Fearing for their security, two
    Armenian parliamentarians did not attend a November 2004 NATO seminar
    in Baku.

    Armeniaâ~@~Ys dispute with Azerbaijan over the breakaway region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh perhaps poses one of the largest obstacles to
    further NATO cooperation, government officials say. "If we didnâ~@~Yt
    have an unsettled conflict, we would have more opportunities to
    participate in such programs," the defense ministryâ~@~Ys press
    service quoted Sarkisian as saying.

    If meant as a diplomatic hint for NATO assistance with
    Nagorno-Karabakh, however, the statement failed to secure a desirable
    response. Simmons categorically rejected the notion that NATO might
    dispatch peacekeeping troops to Nagorno-Karabakh in a bid to end that
    conflict. "NATO does not directly participate in conflict resolution
    and doesnâ~@~Yt discuss the issue of locating its peacekeeping forces
    in the region."


    Editorâ~@~Ys Note: Samvel Martirosyan is a Yerevan-based journalist
    and political analyst.

    http://www.eurasianet.org

    --Boundary_(ID_sfpAL/sUjt+lnWk+kh/B9g)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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