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Georgia, Azerbaijan, Turkey Agree On Joint Military Exercises

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  • Georgia, Azerbaijan, Turkey Agree On Joint Military Exercises

    GEORGIA, AZERBAIJAN, TURKEY AGREE ON JOINT MILITARY EXERCISES

    EurasiaNet.org
    Aug 21 2014

    August 21, 2014 - 2:07pm, by Joshua Kucera

    The nascent alliance between Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey took a
    big step forward this week when the defense ministers of the three
    countries met trilaterally for the first time and promised to carry
    out joint military exercises.

    The three ministers, meeting in the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhchivan
    on August 19, agreed to work on "tripartite exercises to enhance the
    combat capability of the armed forces of the three countries and the
    achievement of mutual understanding during joint military operations,
    including the organization of joint seminars and conferences,
    cooperation in military education, development of military technology,
    the exercises for the protection of oil and gas pipelines," said
    Azerbaijani Defense Minister Zakir Hasanov after the meeting.

    While the specific results of the meeting may have had to do with
    protecting joint infrastructure like the pipelines and railroad
    projects that the three countries work on together, the geopolitical
    import of the meeting was undeniable. With Russia's new assertiveness
    and the recent spike in tensions in Nagorno Karabakh, Georgia and
    Azerbaijan are keen to get support wherever they can. "Georgia is
    very fortunate to have such great neighbors and strategic allies
    like Azerbaijan and Turkey," said Georgian Defense Minister Irakli
    Alasania. "And these challenging times from the security standpoint
    in the wider region we need to cooperate more closely and we need
    to be very tightly in touch with each other to defend the critical
    infrastructure that is very integral to our development."

    Alasania also took pains to emphasize that the alliance is not
    directed at anyone in particular: "I would like to underline that
    the only purpose of our meeting is to regulate security and defence
    issues and it is not directed against anyone. Moreover such meetings
    provided additional basis for regional security."

    But that message wasn't necessarily the one that Azerbaijan wanted
    to send. Elchin Mehdiyev, a senior correspondent for the Azerbaijani
    news service Trend.az, wrote that Armenia should take the meeting as
    a warning:

    All this testifies to the fact that a new, more powerful format is
    being created to ensure security in the region. Of course, cooperation
    in the above-mentioned areas will further increase military strength,
    professionalism of armies, potential of military equipment in these
    countries. This will greatly limit the ability of external forces,
    trying to exert influence in the region.

    The meeting at the same time is a substantial message for Armenia,
    which continues to pose a threat to security in the region.

    While assessing the power of the Azerbaijani army during Armenia's
    own recent provocations on the contact line between Azerbaijani and
    Armenian troops, Armenia must thoroughly think and realize that these
    processes will not promise a good future for it. Armenia must take
    a constructive stance on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement.

    Otherwise, the existence of Armenia due to external donations, and
    which is on the verge of collapse will be called into question.

    Armenia downplayed those concerns, saying that the presence of Georgia
    -- which has good relations with Yerevan -- in the grouping would
    blunt any anti-Armenian initiatives: "Armenia has a broad spectrum of
    mutual security interests with our Georgian neighbors, underpinned by
    a number of cooperation endeavors, including in the defence sector,"
    said Deputy Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan. "I believe Georgian
    engagement will restrain these tripartite relations from being at
    odds with Armenian national security."

    Meanwhile, there seems to have been curiously little coverage of the
    meeting in the Russian press. One exception, a piece on the meeting
    in Russian newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta, focused on the amount of
    Russian weaponry that Azerbaijan is buying, a not-so-subtle hint that
    nice words are one thing, but money talks.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/69646

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