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Armenia Plans Troop Deployment In Afghanistan

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  • Armenia Plans Troop Deployment In Afghanistan

    ARMENIA PLANS TROOP DEPLOYMENT IN AFGHANISTAN
    Emil Danielyan

    Jamestown Foundation
    Jan 14 2010

    Soldiers from the Armenian army's special Peacekeeping Brigade
    Armenia is due to send a small contingent of troops to Afghanistan
    next month, in what will be a largely symbolic boost to the NATO-led
    multinational force fighting the Taliban insurgency. The deployment,
    approved by the Armenian parliament last month, has a primarily
    political significance. It will increase to 43 the number of countries
    participating in the increasingly challenging mission and highlight
    Yerevan's intention to continue to deepen its security links with
    the West, while remaining Russia's main ally in the region.

    The Armenian government has sought to bolster the military alliance
    with Moscow, both on a bilateral basis and within the framework of
    the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO),
    while it worked out the details of its deployment with top NATO
    representatives during 2009. In late October, the Armenian Defense
    Minister Seyran Ohanian met with NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh
    Rasmussen and several of his Western counterparts on the sidelines of
    a NATO conference on Afghanistan held in Bratislava, Slovakia. By that
    time, the alliance officially listed Armenia as one of the partner
    states making up its International Security Assistance Force (ISAF)
    in Afghanistan (www.isaf.nato.int).

    "Let me express our appreciation to Armenia for its strong
    contributions to Allied missions, first in Kosovo, and now also in
    Afghanistan," Robert Simmons, NATO's special representative to the
    South Caucasus and Central Asia, subsequently told journalists in
    Yerevan (www.armenialiberty.org, November 6). Celeste Wallander, the US
    Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia,
    likewise discussed the matter with President Serzh Sargsyan and Ohanian
    during an early December trip to Armenia. "The United States values
    its partnership with the Republic of Armenia," Wallander said after
    the talks (Statement by the US Embassy in Yerevan, December 3).

    Following these meetings, the Armenian National Assembly debated and
    overwhelmingly backed the deployment of 40 soldiers to Afghanistan.

    Ohanian told the parliament that they will be stationed near the
    northern Afghan city of Kunduz, and serve there under German command.

    "I think that this mission will contribute to the accomplishment
    of our national objectives," he said. "We will gain a stake in the
    formation of an international security system." The minister also
    noted that neighboring Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey are already
    participants in ISAF (Armenian Public Television, December 8).

    The Armenian leadership made similar arguments when it dispatched
    troops to Kosovo in early 2004 and to Iraq one year later. It doubled
    the number of Armenian soldiers serving in Kosovo to 70, before
    pulling out of Iraq in late 2008. The military personnel engaged
    in those and the Afghan missions serve in a special peacekeeping
    detachment of Armenia's armed forces that was formed in 2001 with
    financial and technical assistance provided by the United States and
    other NATO member states. The volunteer unit, which currently consists
    of two battalions, is due to expand into a fully-fledged brigade by
    2015 in accordance with Yerevan's Individual Partnership Action Plan
    (IPAP), with NATO. The launch of the IPAP in 2005 marked an important
    milestone in a so-called "complementary" policy pursued by the current
    and previous Armenian administrations. The cooperation framework
    committed the South Caucasus state to implement defense reforms aimed
    at bringing its military into greater conformity with NATO standards
    and practices. As part of those reforms, the Sargsyan government
    pushed through the parliament in late 2008 a law that allows the
    defense ministry to hire civilian personnel. It went on to approve new
    statutes and structures of the ministry and the Armenian General Staff.

    The reforms also resulted in the adoption in 2007 of Armenia's official
    national security strategy and military doctrine. Both documents
    describe close cooperation with NATO as one of the guarantees of
    the country's security and independence. They make clear, however,
    that "strategic partnership" with Russia will remain the bedrock of
    Armenian defense policy in the foreseeable future.

    One key manifestation of that partnership is the presence of Russian
    troops in Armenia, which essentially precludes any Turkish military
    interference in Karabakh in favor of Azerbaijan. More importantly,
    the military alliance with Moscow allows Yerevan to receive Russian
    weapons at discounted prices or even free of charge. Russian-Armenian
    military-technical cooperation appeared to intensify after the
    signing in Yerevan on December 17 of an agreement which the Armenian
    defense ministry said envisages bilateral "interaction in exporting
    military products to third countries." A defense ministry statement
    to that effect gave no details of the deal. Moreover, Armenia was
    among five of the seven former Soviet republics aligned in the CSTO,
    the Russian-dominated defense pact, which formed a NATO-style rapid
    reaction force in June 2009. Sargsyan joined his counterparts from
    Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan in monitoring the first
    exercises of the Collective Operational Reaction Forces (CORF) held
    in Kazakhstan in October 2009 (Armenian Public Television, December 8).

    Armenia will thus remain cautious in boosting its military ties
    with the West. The Armenian military stated in the aftermath of the
    Russian-Georgian war that it will not halt its growing cooperation
    with NATO, despite increased tensions between the Alliance and
    Russia over the conflict in South Ossetia (www.armenialiberty.org,
    August 27, 2008). As if to drive home that point, Yerevan hosted
    in September-October 2008 NATO-led military exercises, boycotted
    by Moscow.

    However, Armenia backed out of similar drills that were held in Georgia
    in May 2009 and strongly condemned by the Kremlin. The last-minute
    decision is widely believed to have been taken under Russian pressure.
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