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Russia to Supply More Arms to Baku Than Previously Revealed

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  • Russia to Supply More Arms to Baku Than Previously Revealed

    Russia to Supply More Arms to Baku Than Previously Revealed

    http://asbarez.com/123469/russia-to-supply-more-arms-to-baku-than-previously-revealed/
    Tuesday, May 27th, 2014

    A Russian T-90 tank on parade in Moscow


    MOSCOW (RFE/RL)--Russia is to deliver 12 more heavy flamethrowers to
    Azerbaijan as part of multimillion-dollar arms deals with Baku that
    have caused outrage in Armenia, its main regional ally.

    The Azerbaijani news agency APA revealed on Monday that the
    Azerbaijani army will receive soon 6 TOS-1A systems manufactured by
    Uralvagonzavod, a state-run Russian defense company. It said a third
    and final batch of these weapons designed to support advancing tanks
    and infantry will be supplied later on.

    According to APA, Azerbaijan already took delivery of six such
    multiple-launch systems last year and put them on display during a
    June 2013 military parade in Baku.

    A TOS-1A system can fire up to 24 incendiary or thermobaric rockets in
    a single salvo. With a 6-kilometer range, the rockets are designed to
    destroy enemy personnel, armored vehicles and transport.

    News of the supplies of the flamethrowers came just days after a
    senior Russian defense official said that Azerbaijan is entitled to
    buying 100 more modern tanks from Russia. The Russians have already
    sold a similar number of T-90 tanks to Azerbaijan in line with $1
    billion defense contracts signed in 2011. They were disclosed in May
    last year, sparking angry reactions from Armenian politicians, pundits
    and media commentators.

    Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian on Monday commented cautiously on the
    tank deliveries, saying that Russia has a sovereign right to export
    weapons. "I can't be happy with that but I have no right to stop it,"
    Ohanian told reporters. He insisted that the Russian arms sales will
    not change the military balance in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Analysts in Yerevan were less sanguine about possible consequences of
    Russian-Azerbaijani military cooperation. "If that is not compensated
    with more arms supplies to Armenia it could disrupt the balance,"
    warned Sergey Minasian, the deputy director of the Caucasus Institute.
    He said Moscow has until now cemented the Karabakh status quo with
    large-scale military assistance to Yerevan.

    Another analyst, Ruben Mehrabian, said Russia is not only
    demonstrating that it is not a true Armenian ally but also
    deliberately preventing a peaceful settlement by arming both parties
    to the conflict. "It's time to question Russia's role as a mediator,"
    he said.

    Russian Tank Manufacturer 'Clarifies' Shipments to Azerbaijan
    A Russian defense company reportedly clarified on Tuesday that it has
    not yet completed the delivery of 100 battle tanks to Azerbaijan
    stemming from a Russian-Azerbaijani contract signed in 2012, RFE/RL's
    Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) reported.

    The Azerbaijani news agency APA cited unnamed representatives of the
    state-owned Uralvagonzavod enterprise as saying that shipments of the
    advanced T-90 tanks began last year and are continuing "according to
    schedule." They said the next batch of this military hardware will
    reach Azerbaijan in August.

    "We are not talking about an additional order," one of them said.
    "Right now we are carrying out the outstanding order."

    Konstantin Biryulin, the deputy head of a Russian government agency
    overseeing arms deals with foreign states, told the Itar-Tass news
    agency on Friday that the Russian side completed the tank order last
    month. He said the 2011 contract entitles Baku to buying 100 more
    T-90s.

    According to the Uralvagonzavod source quoted by APA, the two sides
    are currently negotiating on the possibility of more tank sales. "At
    the moment Azerbaijan is Uralvagonzavod's biggest client," added the
    source.

    Citing an unnamed Russian official dealing with arms exports, the
    Moscow daily "Kommersant" on Monday confirmed Azerbaijani President
    Ilham Aliyev's August 2013 claims that the total volume of
    Russian-Azerbaijani defense contracts signed since 2010 is worth
    around $4 billion. The official said that the figure could rise to $5
    billion by the end of this year.

    The Russian weapons supplied to Azerbaijan include not only tanks but
    also sophisticated air-defense and artillery systems and attack
    helicopters.

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