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Putin's Armenia Visit Alarms Azerbaijan

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  • Putin's Armenia Visit Alarms Azerbaijan

    PUTIN'S ARMENIA VISIT ALARMS AZERBAIJAN

    Wall Street Pit
    Dec 6 2013

    By Joshua Kucera Dec 6, 2013, 9:41 AM

    Armenians may have been troubled by Russian President Vladimir Putin's
    visit to their country, as it seemed to be an exhibition of Russia's
    tightening grip on Yerevan's foreign policy. But in Azerbaijan, the
    visit occasioned a different sort of fear: that Putin was confirming
    Russia's military support for Armenia in a potential conflict with
    Azerbaijan over the disputed territory of Nagorno Karabakh.

    One military expert in Baku, Uzeyir Cafarov, said that Putin's support
    for Armenia would increase the risk of conflict. "We must be extra
    careful regarding the situation on the front line in January and
    February. It is possible that local clashes will take place on the
    front line. Russia continues to play double games. We must not give
    in to this and must bring into Russia's attention that its position on
    the Karabakh conflict is biased," Cafarov told the newspaper Azadliq,
    according to a BBC Monitoring report.

    And member of parliament Zahid Oruc told sia.az (also via BBC
    Monitoring), "With this visit and by increasing the number of Russian
    troops in Armenia, Russia is stimulating the regional arms race
    and pushes others to this. This is a threat to the lasting peace in
    the region."

    Baku's concern about the Kremlin's intentions was piqued earlier
    this fall when the commander of the main Russian base in Armenia
    told an official Defense Mininstry newspaper that Russia "may join
    in the armed conflict" against Azerbaijan if Baku decides to try
    to take back Karabakh by force. Moscow's silence in the face of
    strong diplomatic objections by Baku raised the question of whether
    the Kremlin really would take such an aggressive position against
    Azerbaijan. An interesting piece by Arkady Dubnov in RIA Novosti
    argues that Putin's visit to Armenia was in part intended for him to
    get a personal briefing on whether or not the Russian forces in Armenia
    were actually capable of carrying out that mission. Dubnov writes:

    Now it is known why [Moscow has been silent on that question]: the
    Russian commander-in-chief needed first to be personally convinced
    that the implementation of the tasks formulated by the commander of
    the 102nd base were in the base's power. The report, given to him by
    Colonel Ruzinsky [the base commander], evidently took on this task
    and was exhaustive.

    The commander especially highlighted the features of the military
    component of the base - "the presence of air defense systems, capable
    of detecting and defeating air means of attack at all heights."

    By all appearances, the Russian president was convinced by the
    report...

    Dubnov also suggests that Russia's recent military overtures toward
    Azerbaijan were likely motivated at least in part by a desire to
    pressure Yerevan into joining the Customs Union and stop integration
    with the European Union. And in that context, this visit to Yerevan
    was a message that "yes, we're on your side."

    However, when Putin was asked about this in a press conference after
    his meeting with Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, he dodged the
    question. Asked by a journalist what Russia would do in the event
    that "Azerbaijan's militaristic statements were to be realised,"
    Putin replied:

    If you continue to repeat this aloud, then the conditions for achieving
    a peaceful settlement will be compromised, and other aspects of the
    problem will become preponderant....

    In my opinion, to talk hypothetically about what we would do if a war
    were to break out is totally counterproductive. It would look as if we
    are preparing for war, and we must, as the President of Armenia already
    said, ensure that all sensitive issues are resolved exclusively by
    political and diplomatic means. We shall continue to work towards this.

    Translation: We may be on Armenia's side, but we're still hedging
    our bets.

    http://wallstreetpit.com/101879-putins-armenia-visit-alarms-azerbaijan/

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