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Armenia, Karabakh 'Neutralizing' Azeri Military Buildup, Says Ohania

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  • Armenia, Karabakh 'Neutralizing' Azeri Military Buildup, Says Ohania

    ARMENIA, KARABAKH 'NEUTRALIZING' AZERI MILITARY BUILDUP, SAYS OHANIAN

    Asbarez
    Wednesday, November 17th, 2010
    YEREVAN

    Armenian Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian insisted on Wednesday that
    Azerbaijan has not gained the upper hand in the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict despite its growing defense budget fueled by soaring oil
    revenues.

    Meeting with students at Yerevan State University who will soon be
    drafted to the Armenian army, Ohanian said Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh
    are successfully "neutralizing" the Azerbaijani military's numerical
    superiority in weapons and personnel.

    "We are maintaining the balance of forces vis-a-vis the Azerbaijani
    armed forces, not with quantitative data but by raising the qualitative
    standards of our armed forces," he said. "We are enhancing the
    combat-readiness and fighting spirit of our armed forces."

    The minister added that the Armenian side is also receiving "modern
    weaponry." He did not elaborate, though.

    The remarks came just days after President Serzh Sarkisian warned
    that Azerbaijan will be dealt a "devastating and final" blow if it
    attempts to resolve the Karabakh conflict by force. Sarkisian issued
    the warning as he and Ohanian watched what Armenian officials called
    the biggest ever exercises held by the Karabakh Armenian army.

    Armenian Public Television reported on Monday that the two-week
    maneuvers involved thousands of soldiers, hundreds of tanks and
    armored vehicles as well as heavy artillery. It said the tanks and
    artillery systems fired more than two thousand live rounds as the
    troops simulated an Armenian counteroffensive against Azerbaijan.

    Sarkisian admitted that the exercises were held in response to
    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev's frequent threats to reconquer
    Nagorno-Karabakh and the liberated territories.

    Aliyev's government announced recently plans for another sharp rise
    in Azerbaijani defense spending. It is projected to reach $3.1 billion
    next year, a sum exceeding Armenia's entire state budget. The Armenian
    government plans to spend only about $400 million on defense in 2011.

    The spending gap is somewhat offset by Armenia's military alliance
    with Russia, which enables it to acquire Russian-made weapons at
    cut-down prices or free of charge. A new Russian-Armenian defense
    agreement signed in August commits Moscow to supplying Yerevan with
    "modern and compatible weaponry and special military hardware."

    "The existing situation allows us to say that the positions of
    the Republic of Armenia and the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic have not
    weakened," Ohanian said. "On the contrary, today we have a situation
    where our positions have strengthened on both the diplomatic and
    military fronts."

    Ohanian also downplayed a recent spate of non-combat deaths and other
    violent incidents in the Armenian army ranks, which sparked a public
    uproar and led to the sackings and arrests of several dozen servicemen.

    "Of course, this is a worrisome issue," he said, answering a question
    from a student. "But analyses conducted in the army and statistics lead
    to the conclusion that, on the whole, abuses and other extraordinary
    incidents in the armed forces are decreasing, rather than increasing."

    Another student wondered which military structure in the country
    is most corrupt. "There is no [military] area where corruption is
    particularly rampant," replied Ohanian. "It all depends on the moral
    integrity of the commanders of a particular field. We are making
    appropriate efforts in that direction."




    From: A. Papazian
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