Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Azeries To Add Drones To Their Military Arsenal

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

  • Azeries To Add Drones To Their Military Arsenal

    AZERIS TO ADD DRONES TO THEIR MILITARY ARSENAL
    Jirair Haratunian

    ArmeniaNow.com
    04 July, 2008
    Armenia


    Armenian Assembly of America

    Internet has carried headlines from Baku and Yerevan on the latest
    in military buildup . . .


    "Azeris May Buy Drones From Israel"

    "Azerbaijan to Buy UAVs to Watch Over Occupied Areas"

    "Armenia Takes Conuntermeasures in Response to Azerbaijan Buying
    Unmanned Aircraft"

    "Karabakh to enlarge Security Zone if Azerbaijan Attacks"

    There's more but the picture is clear. The war rhetoric from Baku is
    now amplified by reports that 10 unmanned robotic reconnaissance
    aircraft, popularly called "drones," are being purchased from
    Israel. This news follows another report that Azerbaijan is raising
    its annual defense budget to new heights: from $1 billion to $1.3
    billion next year. Armenian responses are equally stark. Nagorno
    Karabakh's president warns that Armenian forces will seize more
    territory to enlarge its security zone if Azerbaijan attacks. And
    in Yerevan, Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian asserted that defense
    counter-measures are being taken by Armenia's military forces.


    Drones have become increasingly employed in warfare today. Israel
    uses them to track Hamas insurgents in Gaza, and Americans search
    out al-Qaeda and other insurgents in Iraq and Taliban fighters in
    Afghanistan. In one of the South Caucasus conflict zones, a Georgian
    drone was shot down by a Russian jet over the disputed region of
    Abkhazia. The Georgians protested loudly and criticism was heard from
    Washington, but the Georgians were not about to go to battle against
    Russian troops in Abkhazia over the incident.


    However, one must wonder about the consequences if one of Azerbaijan's
    newly purchased drones was destroyed by an Armenian military
    jet. Could that ignite large-scale warfare in the Karabakh region? It
    certainly can and some analysts predict renewed fighting is becoming
    inevitable. One Armenian political analyst, Levon Melik-Shahnazarian
    has written: "As soon as Azerbaijan concludes that it militarily
    surpasses Armenia it will not hesitate a second (to attack). In an
    analysis on June 20, Trend News Agency wrote, "Azerbaijani experts
    believe that if military expenditures continue to be expanded by both
    countries, the resumption of military operations between Azerbaijan
    and Armenia will be inevitable."


    The reaction from United States officials to this danger ranged from
    sharp questions in Congress, to more muted concerns from American
    diplomats. In a June 18 congressional hearing entitled "The Caucasus:
    Frozen Conflicts and Closed Borders" House Foreign Affairs Committee
    Chairman Howard Berman (D-CA) expressed alarm over the situation
    stating, "I'm deeply concerned by the increasingly bellicose statements
    made over the past year about Nagorno Karabakh, by senior Azerbaijani
    officials, as well as the steady increase in Azerbaijan's defense
    budget as that nation acquires more oil wealth. The serious breakdown
    earlier this year in the 14-year-old cease-fire has been widely blamed
    on Azerbaijani provocations."


    Sharp questions were directed at Daniel Fried, Assistant Secretary
    of State for European and Eurasian Affairs, who testified at the
    hearing. In a more diplomatically nuanced response Fried said, in part,
    "We hope that the Azerbaijani government will avoid the temptation
    of thinking that renewed fighting is a viable option. In our view
    it is not. We have noted our concern with persistent bellicose
    rhetoric by some Azerbaijani officials." He carefully neglected to
    note that President Aliyev is the most insistent Azerbaijani saber
    rattler. Fried went on to say that the United States calls on Baku
    "to focus on the peaceful resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh dispute."


    What is clear is that the moment is fraught with danger. It is
    universally agreed that the sharp increase in the military inventory
    of Azerbaijan and corresponding improvement of Armenia's defense
    arsenal intensifies the threat of a new Karabakh war.


    One good sign was that peace talks brokered by the OSCE's Minsk Group
    co-chairs were resumed in St. Petersburg. It was President Serge
    Sarkisian's first opportunity to directly engage President Aliyev in
    the peace process. No agreements were reached nor were any expected;
    however, Aliyev did reiterate Baku's commitment to the primacy of the
    OSCE's Minsk Group as the principal mechanism for the resolution of
    the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. That was a small but important shift in
    tactics by the Azeri president. In recent months Baku had attempted
    to circumvent the OSCE and move the Karabakh issue to the larger
    diplomatic arena of the United Nations, where it had the automatic
    support of virtually all the Islamic nations and those states that
    are confronted by secession-minded minorities.


    In sum, the atmosphere is extremely dangerous and the flicker
    of hope for a peaceful settlement is dim. What is needed is for
    the international community to more forcefully insist that the
    resumption of war is unacceptable. New investments in the energy
    and transportation sectors are at risk, as is the stability of the
    entire region. As for Armenia, it must keep its military capabilities
    at the highest levels of efficiency. But just as important, sane
    minds must prevail so that the current internal political tensions
    do not jeopardize the physical security of the people in Armenia and
    Nagorno Karabakh.
Working...
X