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Moscow and Yerevan Parry Blow From Baku

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  • Moscow and Yerevan Parry Blow From Baku

    Nezavisimaya Gazeta, Russia
    Jan 15 2009


    Moscow and Yerevan Parry Blow From Baku


    by Yuriy Simonyan

    On Wednesday [14 January] the Russian Defence Ministry officially
    refuted a report disseminated by the Azerbaijani media on the handover
    of armaments worth 800m dollars to Armenia. This happened almost a
    week before the deadline announced by the Russian Federation Defence
    Ministry for clarifying the circumstances. "The reports do not
    correspond to reality. The text of the official announcement will be
    issued in the next few hours," Nezavisimaya Gazeta was told at the
    press centre of Russia's defence department.

    Let me remind you that the story of the virtually free handover to
    Yerevan of armaments from the 102d Russian military base located in
    the Armenian city of Gyumri was published in the first days of the New
    Year by a number of the Azerbaijani mass media. Ambassador of the
    Russian Federation Vasiliy Istratov was summoned to the Azerbaijani
    Foreign Ministry to give an explanation.

    The Russian Foreign Ministry promised Baku that it would look into the
    situation, and the Russian Federation Defence Ministry, after
    immediately refuting the Azerbaijani journalists' report, nonetheless
    took a timeout until 20 January "in order to prepare an official
    response."

    There was no shortage of Azerbaijani theories about the "New Year gift
    to Armenia": from the commonplace - nowadays - accusation that Russia
    is planning to stage another war in the Caucasus, to the outrageous
    suggestion that the Armenian authorities might need weapons worth
    nearly $1 million to deal with opposition elements in their own
    society.

    Colonel Seyran Shakhsuvaryan, press secretary at the Armenian Defence
    Ministry, was inundated with telephone calls. "We have received
    nothing from the Russians... Go to the Russian Defence Ministry, after
    all, and ask them why it took a whole week to prepare a statement," he
    said to Nezavisimaya Gazeta, making no secret of his irritation.

    Stepan Grigoryan, head of the Globalization Analysis Centre, expressed
    surprise at events. According to him, taking into account the fact
    that Russia and Armenia are members of the CSTO [Collective Security
    Treaty Organization] and a number of other factors, military
    cooperation will continue and deepen, and "the most important thing is
    that commitments under the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in
    Europe (CFE Treaty) should not be violated in this context."

    The Republic itself has in recent days been full of rumours that the
    Russian base at Gyumri will be substantially extended through the
    redeployment of subunits to other regions of Armenia and that the
    question of opening another military base has also been raised:
    Representatives of the Russian Federation Defence Ministry have
    visited various parts of the country on familiarization trips and
    their choice has supposedly come down in favour of the irregularly
    functioning civil airfield in the small town of Stepanavan in the
    north of Armenia. Both countries' defence departments declined to
    comment on the existence of these plans.

    "Such issues are not decided quite so simply. If the Russian military
    liked the Stepanavan airfield, that in itself tells us nothing.
    Familiarization trips by the Russian military around the country have
    happened and will continue to happen - this is normal practice among
    strategic partners, as is the discussion of long-term plans," former
    Armenian Defence Minister Bagarshak Arutyunyan told Nezavisimaya
    Gazeta. According to him, talk to the effect that the 102d Military
    Base is spreading all over the Republic has no foundation: It is
    deployed where it is supposed to be under the treaty concluded while
    Arutyunyan was minister, and the same, incidentally, is true of its
    aviation component - at Yerevan's Erebuni airport, "which is in joint
    use."

    "Under the CFE Treaty both Russia and Armenia must give notification
    of what they have, where, and in what quantity. They are obliged to
    inform OSCE headquarters in Vienna of any changes to the quantity of
    particular units or redeployments," Arutyunyan told Nezavisimaya
    Gazeta. For this reason the ex-minister believes that the $800 million
    deal publicized by the media is not in accordance with reality: At any
    time any of the parties to the CFE Treaty may express the desire to
    verify compliance with the treaty. "Thus far not a single inspection
    of Armenia has uncovered any violations," the ex-defence minister
    believes. According to him, Azerbaijan is violating the treaty by
    actively buying weapons from the Czech Republic and particularly from
    Ukraine - this is first and foremost a question of armoured equipment
    and Smerch long-range multiple-launch rocket systems. "We all saw the
    results of Ukraine's arming Georgia, and we certainly would not want
    history to repeat itself. And the fact that Baku has rearmed is known
    to the United Nations, to which weapons-exporting countries annually
    send information on the deals made," Arutyunyan told Nezavisimaya
    Gazeta.

    [translated from Russian]
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