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  • Azerbaijan To Continue Military Rearmament, Sparking Concerns Of Pos

    AZERBAIJAN TO CONTINUE MILITARY REARMAMENT, SPARKING CONCERNS OF POSSIBLE WAR WITH ARMENIA
    BYLINE: Lilit Gevorgyan

    Global Insight
    October 13, 2010

    On 13 October, Azeri Finance Minister Samir Sharifov stated yesterday
    that his government is planning to increase its defence budget by
    50% to US$3.2 billion compared to US$2 billion in 2010. Meanwhile,
    defence spending will account for 19.7% of the total budget compared
    to 10.7% in 2010. Some US$1.4 billion will be used to modernise the
    Azerbaijani army's arsenal. The finance minister also indicated that
    there are plans to invest in the development of the country's military
    industry, but he did not reveal any other details.

    Significance:Azerbaijan continues its military build-up, as President
    Ilham Aliyev has been boosting the defence budget in recent years.

    Under the 2011 defence budget, the Azerbaijani military will receive
    100% more financial resources than in the 2008 budget. In July
    2010 the Russian media reported that Russia's state arms exporter,
    Rosoboronexport, signed a US$300-million agreement in 2009 with the
    Azerbaijani Defence Ministry on the supply of two S-300PMU-2 Favorit
    (SA-20b Gargoyle b) battalions. It is the most expensive single
    purchase of weapons by a former Soviet country, apart from Russia.

    Azerbaijan's rearmament is also accompanied by growing threats to pull
    out from internationally mediated peace talks over the deadlocked
    conflict in Armenian-populated Nagorno-Karabakh. The Armenian
    government has taken steps to alert the international community
    about the dangers of the Azerbaijani leader's open pledges to solve
    the conflict through war. Thus during his speech to the UN General
    Assembly on 25 September Armenian foreign minister Eduard Nalbandyan
    warned that Azerbaijan is using its oil wealth to fuel a "military
    adventure" in the conflict, adding that the Azerbaijani government's
    "unabated war rhetoric, increased violations of the ceasefire regime,
    and the unprecedented increase of the military budget by Azerbaijan
    only exacerbate the situation". The situation is reminiscent of the
    Georgian government's sharp increase of military spending before the
    ill-fated August 2008 military campaign against South Ossetia.




    From: A. Papazian
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