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US State Department Report Confirms Azerbaijan Hosts Coastal Radar S

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  • US State Department Report Confirms Azerbaijan Hosts Coastal Radar S

    US STATE DEPARTMENT REPORT CONFIRMS AZERBAIJAN HOSTS COASTAL RADAR STATIONS
    by Lilit Gevorgyan

    Global Insight
    August 2, 2012

    The US State Department has confirmed that the Azerbaijan government
    has set up seven radar stations along its Caspian sea coastline. The
    information was revealed in the Europe and Eurasia Review section
    of the 2011 edition of Country Reports on Terrorism published by the
    Office of Co-ordinator for Counterterrorism at the State Department on
    31 July. The report stated: "Through the Weapons of Mass Destruction
    Proliferation Prevention Program, the Azerbaijan government assumed
    responsibility for the sustainment of seven radar stations along the
    Caspian coast used by the Navy, Coast Guard, and State Border Service
    to conduct maritime surveillance and detect smuggling threats." The
    report went on to say that the South Caucasian country has also
    launched a National Communication System pilot project, which will
    centralise information received from portal monitors at various
    border crossings. Regional media reported that in addition Azerbaijan
    is set to host new radars; however the US report did not suggest
    this. In recent years, with US help, Azerbaijan launched a Caspian
    Guard Special Forces project in conjunction with Kazakhstan, which
    aims to increase security in the Caspian Sea along the Azerbaijani
    and Kazakh borders. The headquarters of the special forces are in
    Azerbaijan's capital Baku.

    Significance:The US State Department report only clarifies the
    existence of radar stations in Azerbaijan. The first media reports of
    these stations emerged in the second half of 2011 although Azerbaijan
    has been working with the US for some time to boost its coastal
    security. The reports suggest that most of the radar facilities
    are positioned along the Caspian shores. The same reports also
    suggest that Azerbaijan had received 30 patrol boats from Turkey and
    three from the US. The US has also helped Baku set up a control and
    command centre. Dozens of members of Azerbaijan's military personnel
    have received training at NATO's European training centres, although
    military from other former Soviet states involved in NATO's Partnership
    for Peace programme have also been involved in similar military
    training. The news of the radar stations has come under spotlight
    with the growing tensions between the international community and
    Iran over the latter's alleged nuclear weapons programme. Azerbaijan's
    relations with Iran have been strained for some time, especially since
    it emerged in February this year that Baku concluded a USD1.6 billion
    arms supply deal with Israel which has threatened a military strike
    against the Islamic Republic. Part of the deal involves the supply
    of Israel's Super Green Pine radar, a development that has unnerved
    Iran, although Azerbaijan has played down Tehran's fears by saying
    that the equipment will be used elsewhere, which is widely understood
    to be against Armenia's self-declared republic of Nagorno Karabakh,
    in the west of Azerbaijan.

    The confirmation of radar facilities hosted in eastern Azerbaijan
    along the Caspian coast are likely to deepen Tehran's concerns about
    their potential use against Iran in the event of military escalation.

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