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Armenia, Greece Discuss Closer Military Ties

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  • Armenia, Greece Discuss Closer Military Ties

    ARMENIA, GREECE DISCUSS CLOSER MILITARY TIES
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Armenialiberty.org, Armenia
    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 5 2005

    Greece's Defense Minister Spilios Spiliotopoulos pledged on Tuesday
    to boost long-running Greek military assistance to Armenia which
    Armenian leaders said stems from "common strategic interests" of the
    two nations.

    "The Greek people and the Greek Defense Ministry always stand by the
    Armenian people and are ready to help them on any issue," he told
    reporters at the end of an official visit to Yerevan.

    Spiliotopoulos gave few details of his meetings with President Robert
    Kocharian, Prime Minister Andranik Markarian and Defense Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian, saying only that they touched upon Greek-Armenian
    military ties both within the bilateral and NATO frameworks.

    Spiliotopoulos was reported to tell Kocharian that Greece is ready
    to "continue and reinforce" its military cooperation with Armenia,
    which includes "material assistance" to the Armenian armed forces. The
    presidential press service also cited him as promising to assist in
    Yerevan's growing involvement in NATO's Partnership for Peace program.

    "Greece is a friend and partner of Armenia," Kocharian said, according
    to his office.

    The praise was echoed by Markarian. "Andranik Markarian and Spilios
    Spiliotopoulos stressed that Greece's and Armenia's interests in the
    region converge because they are based on common approaches to the
    existing problems and the realization of the need to maintain its
    stability and military-political balance," read a statement by the
    Armenian government's press service.

    "They noted that the expansion and development of the ongoing military
    cooperation between the two countries in the military-technical,
    military-educational, military-information and other fields will
    enable our countries to protect their common strategic interests in
    a more effective manner," the statement said.

    The two Christian nations share a long history of troubled relations
    with their common Muslim neighbor, Turkey. That might explain why
    Greece is Armenia's closest NATO partner, having provided its military
    with non-combat equipment and trained scores of Armenian officers.

    Greece's financial and technical aid was also instrumental in the
    creation in 2001 of a special peace-keeping battalion of the Armenian
    army which has contributed troops to NATO's peace-keeping mission in
    Kosovo and the U.S.-led occupation force in Iraq. Incidentally, the
    Armenian soldiers serve in Kosovo as part of a Greek battalion. Their
    track record was praised by Spiliotopoulos.

    Officials in Yerevan said the Armenian military plans to substantially
    increase the size of its peace-keeping detachment and counts on Greek
    assistance to the effort.
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