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  • Armenia & Azerbaijan will participate in Exercises

    WPS Agency, Russia
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    May 6, 2009 Wednesday



    ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN WILL PARTICIPATE IN EXERCISE;
    Moldova alone will abstain, persuaded by Russia

    Mikhail Zygar


    AZERBAIJAN AND EVEN ARMENIA (A CIS COLLECTIVE SECURITY TREATY
    ORGANIZATION MEMBER) WILL PARTICIPATE IN THE ALLIANCE'S EXERCISE IN
    GEORGIA OVER RUSSIA'S PROTESTATIONS; The Alliance is determined to run
    a military exercise in Georgia.


    The meeting of the Russian-NATO Council, the first since last autumn,
    took place in Brussels. Russian Representative to NATO Dmitry Rogozin
    made a ritualistic statement on the necessity to cancel the NATO
    exercise in Georgia scheduled for later this month. The Alliance
    traditionally dismissed the idea. It was probably the only tricky
    moment in the entire meeting.

    "I like it that the meeting will take place. It does not mean,
    however, that all of a sudden we agree with each other on absolutely
    everything. We have interests that do not necessarily jibe," NATO
    Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said. Sources from NATO HQ
    meanwhile proclaimed Brussels ready for a restoration of relations
    with Russia interrupted after the war in Georgia. They warned,
    however, that restoration of relations did not mean that the subjects
    of Georgia as well as those of Abkhazia and South Ossetia were off the
    agenda for good.

    Since the first meeting was essentially ritualistic, discourse over
    the legend of the forthcoming Cooperative Longbow'09/Cooperative
    Lancer'09 became the main intrigue of the whole event. Rogozin brought
    the matter up, as promised. (Russia had demanded cancellation of the
    exercise a week ago. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had denied the
    plans to participate even in the observer's capacity and advised other
    countries to follow suit). Scheffer announced that cancelling the
    exercise was out of the question and once again reiterated that it was
    not aimed at Russia.

    What aggravates Russia is that the future exercise is not to be
    restricted to NATO members alone. Even some countries of the
    Commonwealth are supposed to participate in the exercise - namely
    Moldova, Azerbaijan, and Armenia. Kazakhstan refused to participate in
    the NATO exercise last week, Moldova on April 29.

    CIS countries' intention to participate in the exercise upset the Duma
    which found this intention on the part of Armenia particularly
    disturbing. Armenia is a member of the CIS Collective Security Treaty
    Organization. Some commentators assumed that Yerevan would follow in
    the wake of Astana (Kazakhstan) and change its mind concerning
    participation. President of Armenia, Serj Sargsjan, visited Moscow and
    met with President Dmitry Medvedev last week but neither national
    leader would so much as mention the forthcoming exercise. Deputy
    Secretary General of NATO Claudio Bisogniero visited Yerevan last
    Tuesday. Sargsjan assured the visitor that integration in Europe
    remained the high priority of Armenia's foreign policy and cooperation
    with NATO its crucial element. Sargsjan actually called cooperation
    with the Alliance within the framework of the Partnership for Peace
    NATO's Program an element of Armenian national security.

    Source: Kommersant, April 30, 2009, p. 8
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