ARMENIA & AZERBAIJAN: A CAUCASUS SPACE RACE IS ON!
EurasiaNet.org, NY
June 24 2013
June 24, 2013 - 1:48pm, by Giorgi Lomsadze
The frozen conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan is being flavored
with some Cold-War spice, namely a space race.
Readers will recall that earlier this year Azerbaijan succeeded in
flinging a satellite into orbit. Not to be outdone, Armenia is now
making plans to place its own satellite in space.
The estimated cost of Armenia's space ambitions - $250 million -
should raise some eyebrows given that the country's GDP (based on
purchasing power parity) is roughly $19 billion, and it already has
$4.37 billion in sovereign debt. But the economic practicality of the
venture probably isn't the most important consideration for Yerevan.
With the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict still stalemated, Armenian leaders
don't want to give their Azerbaijani counterparts any idea that they
can't keep up in any type of arms race.
Azerbaijan used its oil and gas wealth to underwrite its satellite
project. Armenian telecommunications officials are saying they will
scrape together funds from private investors for their satellite. To
succeed, the country may put to use its key natural resource,
the Armenian diaspora. Remittances from Armenians abroad make up a
significant share of Armenia's national income. Meanwhile, Russia,
Armenia's main regional ally and a space-exploration heavyweight,
may lend money for the venture and help manufacture the satellite.
Armenian officials are now setting up a space agency, dubbed ArmCosmos,
and are negotiating with the International Telecommunications Union,
a UN body, to clear the path for its prospective launch.
The competition reminds the Tamada of an old joke about the Caucasus,
in which an Armenian boy asks his grandfather why the Armenians haven't
sent a man into space. The old man replies, "If the Armenians sent a
cosmonaut into space, the Georgians would die of envy. If the Georgians
die of envy, the Armenians will die of pleasure. And if the Georgians
and Armenians die, the Azeris will be left with all the land."
EurasiaNet.org, NY
June 24 2013
June 24, 2013 - 1:48pm, by Giorgi Lomsadze
The frozen conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan is being flavored
with some Cold-War spice, namely a space race.
Readers will recall that earlier this year Azerbaijan succeeded in
flinging a satellite into orbit. Not to be outdone, Armenia is now
making plans to place its own satellite in space.
The estimated cost of Armenia's space ambitions - $250 million -
should raise some eyebrows given that the country's GDP (based on
purchasing power parity) is roughly $19 billion, and it already has
$4.37 billion in sovereign debt. But the economic practicality of the
venture probably isn't the most important consideration for Yerevan.
With the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict still stalemated, Armenian leaders
don't want to give their Azerbaijani counterparts any idea that they
can't keep up in any type of arms race.
Azerbaijan used its oil and gas wealth to underwrite its satellite
project. Armenian telecommunications officials are saying they will
scrape together funds from private investors for their satellite. To
succeed, the country may put to use its key natural resource,
the Armenian diaspora. Remittances from Armenians abroad make up a
significant share of Armenia's national income. Meanwhile, Russia,
Armenia's main regional ally and a space-exploration heavyweight,
may lend money for the venture and help manufacture the satellite.
Armenian officials are now setting up a space agency, dubbed ArmCosmos,
and are negotiating with the International Telecommunications Union,
a UN body, to clear the path for its prospective launch.
The competition reminds the Tamada of an old joke about the Caucasus,
in which an Armenian boy asks his grandfather why the Armenians haven't
sent a man into space. The old man replies, "If the Armenians sent a
cosmonaut into space, the Georgians would die of envy. If the Georgians
die of envy, the Armenians will die of pleasure. And if the Georgians
and Armenians die, the Azeris will be left with all the land."