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Yerevan 'Committed' To Key Arms Control Treaty

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  • Yerevan 'Committed' To Key Arms Control Treaty

    YEREVAN 'COMMITTED' TO KEY ARMS CONTROL TREATY
    Emil Danielyan

    Armenialiberty.org
    Oct 18 2011

    Armenia will continue to abide by a key international arms control
    treaty despite its violation by Azerbaijan, President Serzh Sarkisian
    told a visiting senior U.S. official on Tuesday.

    Meeting with Rose Gottemoeller, a U.S. assistant secretary of state
    dealing with arms control, Sarkisian described the Conventional Forces
    in Europe (CFE) treaty as "one of the pillars of security and stability
    in Europe." He said Yerevan therefore remains committed to its "spirit
    and aims" and will comply with limitations placed by the treaty.

    Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian gave similar assurances at a
    separate meeting with Gottemoeller. According to a statement by the
    Armenian Foreign Ministry, Nalbandian said at the same time that the
    CFE needs to be "updated." The statement gave no details.

    Signed in 1990 and revised in 1999, the CFE puts specific limits on
    the deployment of troops and heavy weapons from the Atlantic coast
    to Russia's Ural mountains. Armenia as well as neighboring Georgia
    and Azerbaijan signed up to it after gaining independence.

    Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian meets with U.S. Assistant Secretary
    of State Rose Gottemoeller, 18Oct2011.â~@~Kâ~@~KDespite setting
    equal arms ceilings for the three South Caucasus states, the treaty
    has has not prevented an intensifying arms race between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan. The latter has spent billions of dollars in oil revenues
    on a military build-up which Baku hopes will eventually enable it to
    win back Nagorno-Karabakh and other Armenian-controlled territories.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan have long been accusing each other of exceeding
    their CFE quotas.

    Sarkisian was quoted by his press office as saying that the alleged
    Azerbaijani non-compliance "has already created a serious danger for
    the entire region." Nalbandian likewise complained to Gottemoeller
    about Azerbaijan's "overt violation" of CFE terms.

    Azerbaijani officials deny such claims. They say that Armenia itself
    keeps a large part of its military hardware in Karabakh in order to
    imitate its compliance with the treaty.

    A senior U.S. diplomat said privately earlier this year that both
    warring nations are not honoring their CFE commitments.

    The CFE allows signatory states to inspect each other's compliance with
    the arms ceilings through random visits to just about any military
    facility. However, in line with a gentlemen's agreement reached in
    the 1990s the Armenian and Azerbaijani militaries have never sent
    CFE inspectors to one another.

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