Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russia Ends Transfer Of Military Equipment To Armenia

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

  • Russia Ends Transfer Of Military Equipment To Armenia

    RUSSIA ENDS TRANSFER OF MILITARY EQUIPMENT TO ARMENIA
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Aug. 17, 2006

    Russia was reportedly completing on Thursday the transfer of military
    equipment from one of its two Soviet-era bases in Georgia to Russian
    troops stationed in Armenia.

    Russian news agencies said a convoy of 13 military trucks and armored
    vehicles left the Russian base in Akhalkalaki, southern Georgia, early
    in the morning and was expected to cross the Armenian border in the
    afternoon. Russian military officials were quoted as saying that it
    is the 12th and last batch of military hardware and other equipment
    sent to Armenia since the start of a gradual Russian pullout from
    Georgia last May.

    Under a Russian-Georgian agreement signed earlier this year, Moscow is
    to close the bases headquartered in Akhalkalaki and the Georgian Black
    Sea city of Batumi by the end of 2008. Most of the tanks and other
    heavy weaponry of the Akhalkalaki facility are due to be transported
    to Russia by rail via Azerbaijan.

    Unlike Georgia, Armenia is a member of the Russian-led Collective
    Security Treaty Organization and regards Russian military presence
    as a key element of its national security doctrine. Yerevan has made
    it clear that Russian troops will remain on Armenian soil in the
    foreseeable future despite its growing military ties with NATO and
    the United States in particular.

    The Russian military had moved military equipment from the
    Armenian-populated Georgian town to its larger base in Gyumri,
    northwestern Armenia, even before the agreement. The shipments sparked
    protests by Azerbaijan which feared that it could be transferred to
    the Armenian military and thereby change the balance of forces in
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Russian officials have assured Baku
    that the materiel is meant for the Gyumri base only.

    Russia's reluctant pullout raised fears of an upsurge in tensions
    in Akhalkalaki and other parts of Georgia's impoverished Javakheti
    region which is mainly populated by ethnic Armenians. The Russian
    base has long been Javakheti's largest employer. There have been no
    reports of major unrest there in recent months.
Working...
X