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Russia: Rubezh 2008 drill not aimed at Azerbaijan, any third country

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  • Russia: Rubezh 2008 drill not aimed at Azerbaijan, any third country

    Krasnaya Zvezda, Defense Ministry, Russia
    March 14 2008


    Russia: Rubezh 2008 drill not aimed against Azerbaijan, any third
    country


    by Oleg Gorupay

    Approximately 4,000 men, including servicemen from three states that
    are members of the ODKB [CSTO: Collective Security Treaty
    Organization], Russia, Armenia, and Tajikistan, will be engaged in
    the Rubezh 2008 joint command-post exercise of the Collective
    Security Treaty Organization, which will be held in the summer and
    fall on the territories of Armenia and Russia.

    The particular feature of this exercise is that questions of the
    preparation of a member of the CSTO for repulsing aggression from
    outside have been put to it for the first time, and this subject
    matter is being considered at so high and representative a level for
    the first time. Only command-post exercises with command elements of
    the organization and the CSTO Collective Rapid-Deployment Force
    (KSBR) were, in effect, conducted at the last such exercise and with
    similar subject matter held on a lesser scale in 2005 in Tajikistan.

    Last year's Rubezh 2007 exercise was held in Tajikistan also and was
    of an anti-terrorist nature. Approximately 500 servicemen from the
    armed forces of Russia, Kazakhstan, and Tajikistan, 50 pieces of
    armoured equipment, an Su-25 flight, and a flight of Mi-24
    helicopters took part in its active phase at the range of the 201st
    Russian Military Base. Uzbekistan, which was represented by an
    operational task force of the country's armed forces, took part in
    the exercise for the first time.

    The present exercise will be conducted in four stages. The first and
    second are stages of the political level, during which institutions
    of state power of Armenia will make the decision to prepare to
    repulse the aggression. That is, proposals to the CSTO Collective
    Security Council with a request from official Yerevan for military
    and military-technical assistance will be prepared.

    As Major-General Sergey Chuvakin, chief of a command element of the
    CSTO Joint Staff, observed, this exercise is being conducted in
    accordance with a plan that is approved annually by the CSTO Defence
    Ministers Council (SMO). In accordance with the available experience,
    the second stage will be conducted in Moscow under the auspices of
    the CSTO Joint Staff, and the entire operations personnel of the
    Joint Staff, the Collective Security Treaty Secretariat, and task
    forces from all the CSTO defence ministries will take part. It was
    emphasized here that all the activities of preparation of the
    exercise have to date been performed in accordance with the plan.

    The Joint Staff is the permanent working body of the CSTO and the
    organization's Defence Ministers Council responsible for the
    preparation of proposals and the implementation of decisions
    pertaining to the military component of the Collective Security
    Treaty.

    The third and four stages are battlefield. A defensive operation will
    be organized at the third state, at the fourth, the direct conduct of
    a joint defensive operation will be rehearsed. Armoured equipment,
    cannon and rocket artillery, army, ground-attack, and fighter
    aviation, air-defence systems, the corresponding engineer subunits
    and signals subunits from the armed forces and border troops of
    Armenia and the 102d Russian Military Base stationed in Gyumri, and
    an air-assault subunit from Tajikistan will be taking part in the
    active phase of the joint command-post exercise in Armenia (Marshal
    of the Soviet Union Bagramyan Republic of Armenia MoD Training
    Centre) as a "computer-generated force". We would note particularly
    that this is a "computer-generated force," not units and subunits in
    their regulation strength since Rubezh 2008 is not a tactical; it is
    a command-post exercise. As Major-General Vitaliy Kormiltsev, chief
    of joint operational and combat training of the CSTO Joint Staff,
    emphasized: "the exercise could thus be classed as brigade-level".

    Although the enlisted troops will really be in operation here, he
    said, it will only be in the role of "computer-generated force". The
    other CSTO members will be represented by task forces of their
    defence ministries.

    According to Colonel Ishkhan Matevosyan, first deputy chief of the
    operations command of the Armed Forces of Armenia Main Staff, battle
    alert, a march, the takeup of defensive positions, field firing, and
    a switch to a counteroffensive are envisaged for the participating
    units and subunits. The dimensions of the range permit division-level
    exercises, no problems with the rehearsal of assignments by artillery
    or aviation are anticipated, therefore.

    All overseas diplomats and military attaches accredited in Yerevan
    will be invited to the joint command-post exercises (SKShU) of the
    CSTO members. "Knowing the sort of attention that the SKShU will
    attract and wishing to prevent negative comments, it has been decided
    to invite to the function all foreign diplomats and military attaches
    accredited in Yerevan," Colonel Ishkhan Matevosyan emphasized. He
    observed here that the Rubezh 2008 exercise is not directed against
    any third country. This is a scheduled exercise, which was officially
    announced back last October. "Only defensive assignments will be
    rehearsed in the SKShU," the spokesman for Armenia's MoD said. The
    general scenario of the exercise has been worked up such that no
    state may be traced in its true borders and names. Nor are any other
    countries, including those contiguous with Russia and Armenia, hinted
    at. In addition, there is no mention of Russia itself either. The
    leadership of the exercise and the CSTO asks that the press and
    politicians refrain from drawing such parallels, therefore. Besides,
    all the operations in the course of the exercise will be performed in
    full accordance with and with consideration of the rules of
    international law and the accords concluded in the CSTO and CIS
    format.

    As Nikolay Bordyuzha, CSTO general secretary, had observed somewhat
    earlier, the Rubezh 2008 exercise is in no way directed against
    Azerbaijan. He said that "in making the decision to conduct the
    exercise we took account, of course, of the entire complexity of the
    situation in the Caucasus and made every effort to avoid giving
    Azerbaijan the impression that these exercises could be staged
    against it." As Nikolay Bordyuzha emphasized, "the exercises will be
    of a command-post nature, there will no be large redeployments of
    military contingents, that is."

    Nor will the preparation or conduct of the exercise be influenced by
    the domestic political situation in Armenia. According to
    Colonel-General Seyran Oganyan, chief of the main staff of the
    country's armed forces, "the situation in the country will not
    influence the military exercises since international treaties and
    plans of military cooperation, as part of which it is that we conduct
    exercises, are in effect here."

    I would like to mention also the non-fortuitous nature of the choice
    of exercise partners. Armenia performs a key role as part of the
    joint force of the Caucasus collective-security region. The
    leadership and the community of the republic see in Armenia's
    participation in the CSTO obvious advantages primarily as regards use
    of the collective potential of the CSTO in support and advancement of
    the interests of national security and also use of the resources of
    political support in international affairs that are available to the
    organization. It is by no means accidental that official Yerevan has
    been actively engaged in preferential military-technical cooperation
    and the system of training of military personnel within the CSTO.
    Representatives of the republic in the statutory bodies of the
    organization have been active, involved participants in the process
    of transformation of the CSTO into an all-purpose security structure.

    [translated from Russia]
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