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BAKU: Despite Armenia's Will, CSTO Participating Countries To Preven

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  • BAKU: Despite Armenia's Will, CSTO Participating Countries To Preven

    DESPITE ARMENIA'S WILL, CSTO PARTICIPATING COUNTRIES TO PREVENT CRRF INTERFERENCE IN REGIONAL CONFLICTS: EXPERTS

    Trend
    June 10 2009
    Azerbaijan

    The Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) participating
    countries will prevent the interference by the Collective rapid
    reaction forces (CRRF) in domestic regional conflicts, despite of
    Armenians will.

    "The probability of interference of CRRF in the Nagorno-Karabakh is
    zero," Azerbaijani political scientist Tofig Abbasov said.

    At a meeting with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev CSTO Secretary
    General Nikolai Bordyuzha informed the president that a package
    of documents to the next summit of the Collective Security Treaty
    Organization, which will be held on June 14, has already been
    prepared. The document includes an agreement on CRRF, annexes
    concerning the issues of command, rules of conduct, documents that
    define the composition of military units belonging to CRRF and a
    roster of forces, RIA Novosti reported.

    The decision to form the CRRF was made at the February summit of the
    CSTO in Moscow.

    Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan and
    Uzbekistan are members of the CSTO.

    According to Bordyuzha, CRRF is not occupied with regional conflicts
    of CSTO participating countries.

    Armenia is not satisfied with the decision, considering that the CRRF
    group must defense CSTO countries of local conflicts.

    "Yerevan is interested in a logic question what will be CSTO's reaction
    in case of military aggression to Armenia by its eastern neighbor. The
    answer that we have heard (the reaction will be reserved or neutral)
    does not satisfy us," senior official of Armenian Foreign Ministry
    told the Vrema Novostei newspaper, who asked to remain anonymous.

    The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
    when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
    armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
    including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts.

    Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The
    co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group - Russia, France, and the U.S. -
    are currently holding the peace negotiations.

    Despite Armenia's will, CSTO participating countries will refuse the
    interference of CRRF in local conflicts.

    Armenia seeks a clarification of the rapid reaction force's potential
    use in the South Caucasus region, and wants a military security
    guarantee from the CSTO that the force can be used to defend Armenia
    "in times of crisis," reflecting Armenia's threat perception form
    both Azerbaijan and Turkey, Armenian political scientist Richard
    Giragosian said.

    The CSTO will most likely neither provide Armenia with the specific
    military guarantee that it seeks nor will it become any sort of
    pressure against Azerbaijan.

    Moscow seems to have a pronounced tendency to improve relations with
    Baku, Giragosian said.

    "Moscow may even see a need to entice Azerbaijan to seek some sort
    of cooperation with the CSTO over the long term, and will not adopt
    any decision that could turn the CSTO into any kind of balance of
    counter against Azerbaijani interests in the region," Director of
    the Armenian Center for National and International Studies Richard
    Giragosian wrote to Trend News in an email.

    Relations of Azerbaijan and Russia will not damage regardless of
    decision to be made at the upcoming meeting of the CSTO, Azerbaijani
    Political Scientist Abbasov believes.

    "Russia is interested that its peacekeeping potential will play
    a decisive role in the Karabakh crisis settlement," Expert of the
    Lider TV Analytical Group Abbasov told Trend News. "Russia's building
    partnership relations with Azerbaijan relies on basic interests."

    He said just these interests have a direct impact on a safety reserve
    regarding presence in the South Caucasus, as well as the fate of the
    global and long-term economic plans.

    Observers believe not only Russia, but also the countries of Central
    Asia will not allow the use of collective rapid reaction forces,
    desired by Armenia.

    The CSTO participants, particularly the countries of Central Asia
    do not want to assume military responsibilities and to intervene
    in the conflicts of two other states, said Kazakh political analyst
    Dosim Satpayev.

    "The remained participants of the CSTO will unlikely support the use
    of the collective rapid reaction forces in the inter-state conflicts,"
    Director of the Risk Assessment Group Satpayev said to Trend News
    by telephone from Astana. "It does not meet the interest of other
    participants in the organization, particularly, the countries of
    Central Asia."

    During a recent meeting of Defense Ministers of Collective Security
    Treaty Organization in Moscow, Uzbekistan also opposed the concept of
    the collective rapid reaction forces, precisely because, Uzbekistan
    believes these forces have even too many opportunities and powers
    that be a regional provider on safety, he said.

    "If Armenia insists on strengthening of these forces, then Uzbekistan,
    by contrast, supports those forces to be under control and less
    involved in issues related to the security of sovereign states,
    on which Russia," Satpayev said.

    Armenia may just stay with its opinion on the matter, said the
    expert. "I do not think it will be able to provide some pressure
    on the process, because Armenia has no leverage on the countries of
    Central Asia," Satpayev said.

    As to aggression actions that may cause intervention for the collective
    rapid reaction to be formed, the situation around the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict has its own characteristics. The act of aggression has already
    been committed more than 15 years ago, which has been clearly indicated
    in four UN resolutions, Abbasov said.

    "If Azerbaijan decides to liberate its occupied territories due to
    failure of mediator-countries' peace efforts, this will become an
    action of compelling to peace as it was done by Russia during the
    crisis in South Ossetia," Abbasov said.

    E.Ostapenko contributed to this article.
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