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Armenian Officials, Analysts Dismiss Reports Of Weapons Transfer Fro

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  • Armenian Officials, Analysts Dismiss Reports Of Weapons Transfer Fro

    ARMENIAN OFFICIALS, ANALYSTS DISMISS REPORTS OF WEAPONS TRANSFER FROM RUSSIA

    Nezavisimaya Gazeta
    Jan 15 2009
    Russia

    The Russian Defence Ministry on Wednesday [ 14 January] officially
    denied reports in the Azerbaijani media regarding the transfer of $800
    million worth of arms to Armenia. This comes almost one week earlier
    than the fact-finding deadline previously announced by the Russian
    Defence Ministry. "The reports are not true. The text of an official
    statement will be circulated in the coming hours," Nezavisimaya Gazeta
    was told by the Russian Defence Ministry's press office.

    Let us recall that this story of an all but complimentary transfer of
    arms from Russia's 102nd military base, located in the Armenian city of
    Gyumri, to Yerevan was published shortly after the New Year by a number
    of Azerbaijani media outlets. Russian Ambassador Vasiliy Istratov was
    summoned to the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry to provide clarifications.

    The Russian Foreign Ministry promised Baku to look into the situation,
    while the Russian Defence Ministry, after initially denying the
    Azerbaijani journalists' reports out of hand, nevertheless took a
    pause until 20 January "to prepare an official response."

    Nothing was lacking in Azerbaijan's accounts of this "New Year's
    present to Armenia": from the already hackneyed accusation that Russia
    is planning to start another war in the Caucasus to the extravagant
    proposition that the Armenian authorities may have needed almost $1
    million worth of arms in order to carry out reprisals against the
    opposition-minded segment of their own society.

    Colonel Seyran Shakhsuvaryan, press secretary for the Armenian Defence
    Ministry, has been pestered with phone calls. "We have not received
    anything from the Russians... You should contact the Russian Defence
    Ministry and find out why they needed a whole week to prepare a
    statement," he told Nezavisimaya Gazeta, scarcely concealing his
    irritation. Stepan Grigoryan, head of the Analytical Centre for
    Globalization, expressed surprise at what has happened. According to
    him, considering that Russia and Armenia are both members of the CSTO
    [Collective Security Treaty Organization], along with a number of other
    factors, military cooperation is going to continue and deepen, and
    "the most important thing is for them not to breach their obligations
    under the Treaty on Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE)."

    The republic [Armenia] itself has been rife with rumours in recent
    days that the Russian base in Gyumri is going to undergo significant
    expansion through the redeployment of units to other regions of
    Armenia, and that the possibility has been raised of opening another
    military base: representatives of the Russian Defence Ministry have
    made familiarization trips to various parts of the country and have
    allegedly settled on an airport in the city of Stepanavan, northern
    Armenia, that is not in regular use. Both countries' defence ministries
    refused to comment on whether any such plans exist.

    "Such matters are not so easily resolved. Even if the Russian officers
    did like the Stepanavan airport, that does not mean anything. Russian
    officers have made familiarization trips around the country in the
    past and will continue to do in the future - this is normal practice
    between strategic partners, as is discussing promising plans," former
    Armenian Defence Minister Vagarshak Harutyunyan told Nezavisimaya
    Gazeta. According to him, talk of the 102nd military base sprawling out
    throughout the republic is unfounded: the base is located where it is
    supposed to be pursuant to a treaty concluded back when Harutyunyan
    was still minister, just as its aviation component, incidentally,
    is based at Yerevan's Erenuni Airport, "which is in joint use".

    "Under the CFE, both Russia and Armenia have to declare what they have,
    where it is, and how much they have. They are required to inform the
    OSCE [Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe] headquarters
    in Vienna about any redeployments or changes in the quantity of any
    units," Harutyunyan told Nezavisimaya Gazeta. It is precisely for
    this reason, the ex-minister believes, that the story circulated by
    the media regarding the $800 million deal is untrue: any signatory to
    the CFE Treaty may at any time declare a wish to inspect compliance
    with the treaty. "So far not a single check of Armenia has revealed
    any violations," the ex-defence minister says. According to him,
    it is Azerbaijan that has violated the treaty by actively purchasing
    weapons in the Czech Republic and, especially, Ukraine -this refers
    primarily to armoured vehicles and Smerch multiple long-distance rocket
    launchers. "We all saw what Ukraine's arming of Georgia led to, and
    one certainly would not want to see history repeated. As for the fact
    that Baku has rearmed, this is well-known at the UN, which receives
    information each year from the arms-exporting countries regarding their
    completed transactions," Harutyunyan informed Nezavisimaya Gazeta.
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