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  • Moscow and Minsk move the border closer to NATO

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    November 24, 2006 Friday

    MOSCOW AND MINSK MOVE THE BORDER CLOSER TO NATO

    by Vladimir Mukhin


    F-16S COME TO POLAND, AND RUSSIA RESPONDS WITH S-300 SYSTEMS IN
    BELARUS; The CIS Council of Defense Ministers and the counterpart
    council for the CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization will meet
    today in Minsk, Belarus. Russia and Belarus are expected to sign an
    agreement establishing the United Air Defense System.


    The CIS Council of Defense Ministers and the counterpart council for
    the CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) will meet
    today in Minsk, Belarus. Such meetings take place twice a year.
    Routine as they usually are, the meetings today promise a sensation.
    Russian Air Force Commander Army General Vladimir Mikhailov and his
    Belarusian counterpart Lieutenant-General Oleg Paferov maintain that
    the two countries are expected to sign an agreement establishing the
    United Air Defense System.

    Moscow and Minsk have been toying with the idea these last seven
    years. Implementation of the project was constantly impeded by
    financial considerations (the cost of the project, in other words)
    and organizational difficulties. Previously unsolvable, all these
    problems were solved this year. As soon as the Alliance expanded. Its
    expansion provided the previously absent stimulus for the
    Russian-Belarusian military integration. In fact, the stimulus was so
    strong as to make Moscow and Minsk forget about the current coldness
    of the bilateral relations and even the specter of the gas war
    between the countries.

    According to Paferov, the bilateral agreement will solve a whole
    number of problems including that of procurement of military hardware
    from Russia. It is to be bought for the United Air Defense System now
    and not for Belarus as such. System commander will be given the power
    to make decisions on the use of Belarusian and Russian forces and
    means entirely on his own, without running them by Minsk first.
    Moscow gave Belarus a present - two batteries of S-300 air defense
    systems, in addition to the two batteries already protecting the
    Brest area. Two batteries more will be deployed in the vicinity of
    Grodno before the year is over. All together, they will comprise the
    115th Brigade of the Belarusian Air Force and Air Defense Forces
    which in its turn will become an element of the United Air Defense
    System.

    Official Moscow (the Russian Defense Ministry) openly admits that
    deployment of S-300s in Belarus is a response to procurement of 48
    F-16 fighters by Poland. "The Russian Air Force is ready for an
    adequate response to this situation," Mikhailov said. "NATO aircraft
    are free to land all over Europe. That's what we are forming the
    Russian-Belarusian United Air Defense System." Sources in the
    Belarusian Air Force and Air Defense Forces point out that the new
    brigade of the air defense systems pushes the aerial target detection
    border 400 kilometers back in the western direction and the killing
    zone 150 kilometers back. S-300s are designed to repel mass air
    strikes, even those that include guided missiles and stealth
    aircraft. The systems are also good for ICBM intercepts.

    Bilateral accords between Russia and other CIS countries are to be
    signed at the meeting of the CIS Council of Defense Ministers today.
    Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov will sign 2007 military cooperation
    annual plans with representatives of the defense ministries of
    Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan.
    An analogous document with Ukraine is to be signed during Ivanov's
    visit to Kiev in early December.

    Georgia and Turkmenistan chose to ignore the Brest meeting.
    Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, Russia's allies in the CSTO, sent deputy
    defense ministers - correspondingly Major-General Bulat Janasayev and
    Colonel Rustam Niyazov.

    CSTO defense ministers are supposed to sum up a recent joint
    exercise, Border 2006 on the Caspian Sea. The exercise was commanded
    by Army General Muhtar Altynbayev, Defense Minister of Kazakhstan.
    His absence from Brest certainly looks odd.

    Moreover, CSTO Secretary General Nikolai Bordyuzha is supposed to
    update defense ministers on restoration of Uzbekistan's membership in
    the structure. How is he going to do so if Tashkent is not
    represented by its defense minister? The Defense Ministries of
    Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan decline to comment, let alone explain, for
    the time being.

    Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, November 23, 2006, pp. 1, 7

    Translated by A. Ignatkin
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