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  • Karabakh Army Holds War Games

    KARABAKH ARMY HOLDS WAR GAMES
    By Karine Kalantarian in Stepanakert and Aza Babayan in Moscow

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    April 19 2006

    The ethnic Armenian armed forces of Nagorno-Karabakh ended on Wednesday
    week-long large-scale exercises which the disputed region's leadership
    said highlighted their ability to fend off possible military action
    by Azerbaijan.

    Hundreds of troops, backed up by tanks, heavy artillery and helicopter
    gunships firing live rounds, practiced defensive and offensive
    operations at a training ground not far from the Armenian-Azerbaijani
    line of contact east of Karabakh.

    The war games, which will be evaluated by top military officials
    on Thursday, followed a familiar scenario, with the Karabakh army
    fighting back an enemy assault and then going on counteroffensive.

    They also involved a rare call-up of local army reservists who also
    took in the simulated fighting.

    Armenia's Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian and the chief of army staff,
    Colonel-Lieutenant Mikael Harutiunian, monitored the proceedings
    along with the leadership of the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh
    Republic (NKR). "At first glance, everything is alright," Sarkisian
    told reporters.

    Armenian and Karabakh officials insisted that the exercises are not
    connected with Azerbaijan's renewed threats to win back Karabakh
    by force or aimed at affecting the ongoing peace talks mediated by
    the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation
    in Europe. Sarkisian claimed that President Ilham Aliev and other
    Azerbaijani leaders make such threats for "propaganda purposes."

    Sarkisian also said he looks forward to Aliev's meeting with President
    George W. Bush at the White House which is scheduled for April 28. "I
    am confident that the president of the United States will urge Aliev
    to resolve the conflict by peaceful means," he said.

    NKR President Arkady Ghukasian, for his part, remained skeptical
    about chances of a breakthrough in the peace process. "In my opinion,
    Azerbaijan is dragging out the negotiations," he said. "Azerbaijan
    is not prepared for a settlement. But this is a case where I want to
    be mistaken."

    Ghukasian denied the existence of any major differences between
    Karabakh and Armenia on how to resolve the conflict, saying that
    the Karabakh Armenians "have no reason to mistrust" Yerevan. Still,
    he renewed calls for the NKR's direct involvement in the peace process.

    Meanwhile, Russia's chief Karabakh negotiator, Yuri Merzlyakov,
    confirmed on Wednesday that he and the French and U.S. co-chairs of
    the Minsk Group will likely visit the conflict zone early next month
    in a bid to arrange another meeting between Aliev and his Armenian
    counterpart Robert Kocharian. Speaking to RFE/RL in Moscow, Merzlyakov
    said the two leaders have already been presented with the mediators'
    revised peace proposals and are currently studying them.

    He refused to disclose those proposals.

    The Minsk Group's U.S. co-chair, Steven Mann, is due to pay a separate
    visit to Baku and Yerevan later this week.
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