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Armenia's Leadership Remembers Killed Soldiers On Army Day

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  • Armenia's Leadership Remembers Killed Soldiers On Army Day

    ARMENIA'S LEADERSHIP REMEMBERS KILLED SOLDIERS ON ARMY DAY

    ARMENPRESS
    Jan 28, 2008

    YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS: President Robert Kocharian,
    prime minister Serzh Sarkisian, other high-ranking government and
    parliament officials, army brass and Catholicos Karekin II, head
    of the Armenian Church, visited today the Yerablour cemetery on a
    Yerevan outskirt to remember all those who died in the battle for
    Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.

    They laid flowers at the graves of late prime minister Vazgen
    Sarkisian, parliament chairman Karen Demirchian and at a memorial
    erected in memory of all killed soldiers. The ceremony was timed to
    mark the 16-th anniversary of the establishment of Armenian armed
    forces.

    Speaking to journalists defense minister Mikael Harutunian said
    the Armenian army is getting stronger and more efficient with every
    passing year.

    "Despite incessant Azerbaijani war rhetoric it does not dare to resume
    hostilities and this is evidence of the growing might of our army,
    which is ready to rebuff any possible aggression and ensure the
    security of our nation,' the minister said.

    The minister downplayed speculations that the army is ready to shift
    from mandatory conscription to a contract one.

    "In order to have a professional army we need to have a very strong
    economy, a strong budget to run a contract army,' he said, adding also
    that shifting to a contract army is contingent , apart from finances,
    on some other, particularly, regional factors.

    The minister's remarks came in retaliation to ex-president
    Levon Ter-Petrosian's recent arguments that Armenia could have a
    10,000-15,000 army.

    "Armenia can not cut the army to that size because that would
    jeopardize our security,' the minister said.

    Apart from being a member of the Russia-led Collective Security Treaty
    Organization (CSTO) Armenia participates also in NATO's Partnership for
    Peace (PiP) program. Armenia is also in the process of implementation
    of the Individual Partnership Action Plans (IPAP) which it signed with
    NATO. IPAP is a program for those countries that have the political
    will and ability to deepen their relationship with NATO.

    In late 2004, Armenia deployed a unit of 46 soldiers, which included
    a logistic, medical and support soldiers to Iraq in support of the
    American-led Coalition. Armenia is involved also in peacekeeping
    operations in Kosovo, joining the peacekeeping activities in
    2004. Armenian 34-member "blue helmets" platoon serve there within
    the Greek battalion.

    Armenia's military budget for 2008 will increase 20 percent to 124.366
    billion drams (about $380 million).
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