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  • Karabakh claims coup with drone plane hit

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting IWPR, UK
    CAUCASUS REPORTING SERVICE, No. 610
    September 28, 2011


    KARABAKH CLAIMS COUP WITH DRONE PLANE HIT

    Azerbaijan denies it sent unmanned aircraft, but incident focuses
    attention on defence buildup in frozen conflict.

    By Lusine Musaelyan, Gayane Abrahamyan, Jasur Sumerenli

    Officials in Nagorny Karabakh are delighted with the shooting down of
    a pilotless plane, saying it shows their military could fend off any
    potential attack from Azerbaijan.

    Some analysts in Armenia, however, are concerned that the use of
    aerial drones shows that Azerbaijan is upgrading its defence systems
    and is not afraid to use them.

    In Azerbaijan itself, defence minister spokesman Eldar Sabiroglu
    denied that the pilotless craft belonged to his country.

    In both Karabakh - which claimed independence from Azerbaijan when the
    Soviet Union collapsed - and in Armenia, there was no doubt that the
    drone that came down near the village of Vazgenashen on September 12
    was Azerbaijani. The plane was hit about ten kilometres inside the
    `line of control' which separates Karabakh and Azerbaijani forces.

    Davit Babayan, spokesman for president of Karabakh, underscored the
    significance of downing the drone.

    `If our army was somewhat weaker, than our enemy would have attacked
    and launched widespread operations long ago,' he said.

    Vitaly Balasanyan, a former general who now sits in Karabakh's
    parliament, said unidentified aircraft have frequently entered the
    territory's airspace.

    `Because our anti-aircraft defences are very strong, we have always
    been able to fix the location of any object and destroy it if
    necessary,' he said.

    Warfare between Armenian forces in Karabakh and the Azerbaijani
    military ended with a ceasefire in 1994, leaving the Armenians in full
    control of the territory and adjoining areas, and hundreds of
    thousands of civilians displaced. A final peace deal has proved
    elusive since the sides cannot agree on possible terms. Although the
    ceasefire has largely held, there are frequent minor clashes along the
    `line of control'.

    Officials in Karabakh refused to give details of how the drone was
    brought down, or how many others have been knocked out of the sky in
    the past.

    Video footage released by the Karabakh military showed wreckage from
    the drone scattered on the ground. The lack of obvious identification
    marks led to some speculation in the Turkish media, in particular,
    that the craft was not Azerbaijani.

    Mehman Aliyev, editor-in-chief of the Turan news agency in Azerbaijan,
    questioned why defence officials in Baku could not just admit they had
    lost an aircraft. The suggestion that it might belong to another state
    was more troubling, he said, as that would imply that `unidentified
    craft are flying along the front line, and that our air defences and
    armed forces are doing a poor job'.

    Aliyev discounted rumours that the drone had been sent from a third
    country, explaining that `because of its operating radius, the
    possibility of it belonging to Turkey or Russia is approximately
    zero'.

    Azerbaijan's oil wealth has paid for a massive increase in defence
    spending, with the armed forces budget now at 3.3 billion US dollars a
    year. According to Doktrina, an investigative journalism centre, much
    of the increased spend has gone on new weapons systems, including
    drone planes. Doktrina's research indicated that Azerbaijan now has 30
    pilotless aircraft, compared with Armenia's six.

    A source in Azerbaijan's defence ministry told IWPR that the country
    had acquired several Israeli-made Hermes 450 drones. `These are
    high-end aircraft that can fulfill any role,' he said.

    Neither Armenia nor Karabakh can hope to compete with Baku's spending
    power. But David Jamalyan, who sits on a civilian council attached to
    Armenia's defence ministry, said his country was not trying to match
    Azerbaijan's expenditure, and was instead focusing on ways of
    repelling specific threats.

    `If we do not attempt to act in symmetry with Azerbaijan, if for
    example we don't buy as many tanks because we don't have the resources
    to do so, then we're taking the asymmetrical route, which means buying
    those weapons that are capable of neutralising Azerbaijan's
    quantitative advantage,' he said.

    In Karabakh, former general Balasanyan made the same point, arguing
    that since Armenian forces had won a war against the technically
    superior Azerbaijani forces, `we would secure victory now, since we
    have a regular army, we have all the technology, and [together with
    Armenia] we have two separate states'.

    Not all Armenians in Karabakh are so sanguine about the prospect of an
    accelerating defence programme in Azerbaijan.

    `The Azerbaijani government makes no secret of its desire to launch a
    war,' Masis Mayilyan, a former foreign minister turned political
    analyst, said. `Belligerent statements are accompanied by arms
    acquisitions, with spending accounting for 20 per cent of the
    government budget. Activity by snipers and overflights by spy planes
    are manifestations of this policy,' he said.

    * Lusine Musaelyan is a correspondent for Radio Liberty in Nagorny
    Karabakh. Gayane Abrahamyan is a correspondent for Armenianow in
    Yerevan. Jasur Sumerenli is defence affairs reporter for the Ayna and
    Zerkalo newspapers in Azerbaijan.




    From: A. Papazian
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