Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russian-Armenian Military Exercise Anachronostic

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

  • Russian-Armenian Military Exercise Anachronostic

    RUSSIAN-ARMENIAN MILITARY EXERCISE ANACHRONISTIC
    By Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor,
    Jamestown Foundation
    Sept 16 2005

    On September 10-13, Russia and Armenia conducted a tactical
    military exercise at the Marshal Bagramian training grounds, close
    to the Armenian-Turkish border. President Robert Kocharian and other
    Armenian officials attended the final, live-fire stage of the joint
    exercise. Each side committed a motor-rifle regiment, artillery, and
    tank company, for a total of 1,300 ground troops, to the four-day
    exercise. In addition, four Su-25 and four MiG-24 planes from the
    Armenian side, S-300 air defense systems, and four MiG-29 planes from
    the Russian side, and combat helicopters from both sides took part.

    Armenia's Deputy Defense Minister, Lt.-General Mikael Grigorian, acted
    as coordinator of the exercise in the presence of Maj.-General Andrei
    Popov, commander of Russia's Group of Forces in the Transcaucasus
    (GRVZ), to which the Russian forces stationed in Armenia are
    subordinated. The GRVZ command headquarters has yet to be moved out
    of Tbilisi by Russia's Defense Ministry, presumably to the Russian
    base at Gyumri in Armenia. Russia stations an estimated 5,000 troops
    of all types in Armenia, including 3,000 officially reported to be
    based at Gyumri.

    The exercise aimed to test the interoperability of Russian and
    Armenian forces. It rehearsed a defensive battle against "aggressor
    forces from the direction of Turkey" that attacked on the ground
    and in the air, advancing into Armenia during the first stage of
    the battle. In the follow-up stages, Russian and Armenian forces
    counterattacked and destroyed the invader's forward elements, then
    encircled and attacked the main invasion grouping, forcing it to
    surrender. This type of scenario is traditional at Armenian-Russian
    annual tactical exercises, but it now seems out of step with the
    bilateral rapprochement between Russia and Turkey on all levels,
    including that of regional security. This year's exercise scenario
    added for the first time an "anti-terrorist operation" to suppress
    a diversionary terror attack by the invading force.

    Armenia's Su-25 planes made their first public appearance in the
    country on this occasion. Armenia took delivery of 10 planes of
    that obsolescent type from Slovakia's air force last year. They are
    co-located with the Russian base in Gyumri.

    Addressing all troops in Russian after the exercise, Kocharian
    characterized Armenia-Russia relations overall as "brotherhood...thanks
    to which the Russian military base exists and we conduct joint
    exercises to ensure our countries' security." If viewed in those terms,
    however, the exercise scenario of battling Turkey seems anachronistic
    and unrealistic. For his part, Defense Minister Serge Sarkisian cited
    Azerbaijan as a source of threats to Armenia's security; he expressed
    confidence in the Armenian army's readiness to face that challenge.

    While Yerevan portrayed the exercise accurately as a bilateral
    event, Moscow billed it as an undertaking of the CIS Collective
    Security Treaty Organization (CSTO). Russia's Security Council
    Secretary Nikolai Bordyuzha, also attending the event, listed the
    Russia-Armenia "group of forces" as a CSTO component, together with
    a Russia-Belarus group of forces and the Collective Rapid Deployment
    Forces in Central Asia. However, those two "groups of forces" exist
    only virtually, in Russian planning for wartime operations, and remain
    at any time a matter of Russia's bilateral relations with Armenia or
    Belarus. Armenia's participation in CSTO exercises remains confined
    to the annual air defense practice.

    Moscow traditionally relies on bilateral relations for alliance
    management. However, Russia is interested in advertising the CSTO in
    order to enhance Russia's own status vis-a-vis NATO. Attending the
    NATO-Russia meeting of Defense Ministers on September 13 in Berlin,
    Russia's Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov cited the Russian-Armenian
    exercise as part of ongoing CSTO activities. He sought to portray the
    CSTO as an operational reality and urged NATO to establish cooperation
    with this Russian-led organization. Armenia, however, is interested
    in developing its own ties with NATO through an Individual Partnership
    Action Plan.

    (Interfax, Regnum, Arminfo, Armenian Public Television, September
    12-14; Air Force Monthly, August 2005)

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