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  • Mock Battles Make For Fast Friendship

    MOCK BATTLES MAKE FOR FAST FRIENDSHIP
    by Oleg Korupai, Alexander Tikhonov

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    September 16, 2005, Friday

    SOURCE: Krasnaya Zvezda, September 13, 2005, pp. 1, 3

    TACTICAL EXERCISE OF THE UNITED RUSSIAN-ARMENIAN ARMY GROUP IS
    NEARING ITS END

    Tactical exercise of the United Russian-Armenian Army Group will be
    completed today. The exercise is being run at the Training Center named
    after Marshal of the Soviet Union, Ivan Bagramjan, in Armavir, Armenia.

    Threat of the Northern invasion gauged as real, the South takes
    measures to prevent an aggression against Armenia. Readiness status
    of the troops is upgraded. Establishment of Groups NN 1 and 2 of the
    United Russian-Armenian Army Group is completed in accordance with the
    tactical plans. With the invasion under way, the groups are supposed to
    defend vital objects from enemy air raids and attacks and to contain
    and destroy the enemy afterwards. Group One sends reinforcements to
    the area of the Training Center in order to boost the defense in the
    Yerevan direction.

    This is the scenario of the Russian-Armenian tactical exercise that
    will be completed today. This is the tenth joint exercise run by units
    of the friendly armies. The first exercise of the series was run here,
    in Armavir, in summer 1995.

    As a rule, exercises are run by different units of Groups NN 1 and 2.

    Group One includes units of the 102nd Military Base of the Russian
    Army Group in the Caucasus in Gyumri, motorized infantry and artillery
    regiments of the Armenian national army. Colonel Andrei Kholzakov,
    commander of the Russian military base, commands the Group. Group Two
    includes units of the 5th Army Corps of the Armed Forces of Armenia and
    the motorized infantry regiment of the 102nd Military Base commanded
    by Lieutenant Colonel Andrei Chernichenko.

    Corps Commander Major General Valery Grigorjan commands the group.

    Lieutenant General Mikhail Grigorjan commands the united group. Major
    General Alexander Zinoviev, Commander of the Combat Control Team for
    the Russian Troops in Armenia, is the Russian second-in-command of
    the United Russian-Armenian Army Group.

    The exercise in question mostly involved units of Group 1. It was
    run in three stages.

    Stage One included a drill of the United Group Command, Stage Two
    a command exercise of Group One, and Stage Three (joint tactical
    regimental exercise) involved motorized infantry regiment under Colonel
    Menyakin (the 102nd Military Base) and the 545th Motorized Infantry
    Regiment of the 5th Army Corps of the Armenian national army. Units
    and formations of the Russian and Armenian armies fortified motorized
    infantry battalions of the United Russian-Armenian Army Group involved
    in this phase of the exercise.

    Units directly controlled by the United Group Command drilled
    cooperation (the matter concerns the 15th and 121st AF bases of
    the Armed Forces of Armenia and the AF base of the 102nd Russian
    Military Base).

    United Army Group Commander Grigorjan says that interaction and
    cooperation between units of the Russian and Armenian armies are
    superb, enabling the group command to confidently tackle all and any
    tasks. Grigorjan made a special emphasize on the defensive scenario
    of the exercise that answered the purpose of repelling an aggression
    against any participant. One of the purposes of the exercise concerned
    prevention of acts of sabotage by enemy special forces operating behind
    the lines of the United Russian-Armenian Army Group (specifically,
    prevention of destruction of a nuclear power plant).

    Russia and Armenia established diplomatic relations in 1992. Since
    then, our countries have signed over 160 treaties and accords including
    the Treaty on Friendship, Cooperation, and Mutual Assistance (August
    29, 1997) and documents on Russian military presence in Armenia (Treaty
    on the Legal Status of Russian Armed Forces on the Territory of the
    Republic of Armenia dated August 21, 1992, Treaty on the Russian
    Military Base on the Territory of the Republic of Armenia dated March
    16, 1996). All these documents state that security of the two states,
    collective security in the Commonwealth, and stability in the region
    are the main purposes of the Russian-Armenian military cooperation.

    The Agreement between the Russian Federation and the Republic of
    Armenia on Joint Planning, Deployment of Troops (Forces) for the
    Purposes of Mutual Security was signed in Sochi, Russia, on August
    27, 2000. The National Assembly of Armenia ratified it in February
    2001. The document legalizes establishment on the territory of
    Armenia of the Joint Russian-Armenian Army Group comprising units
    and formations of the Russian and Armenian national armies. The
    Joint Russian-Armenian Army Group includes units and formations
    given the task of defense under the joint command in the period of
    deterioration of the military-political situation in the region and
    a threat of aggression against Russia or Armenia from a foreign state
    or a coalition.

    The exercise that is about to be completed will not be the last in
    the history of Russian-Armenian relations, according to Armenian
    Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisjan. According to Sarkisjan, relations
    between Yerevan and Moscow - particularly in the military-political
    sphere - have advanced all through existence of a sovereign Armenian
    state. Moreover, they are at the height of their potential at this
    point.

    Nikolai Bordyuzha, General Secretary of the CIS Collective Security
    Treaty Organization, is expected to participate in evaluation of the
    outcome of the exercise.
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