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  • After Ukraine, Russia Beefs Up Military In Armenia And Kyrgyzstan

    AFTER UKRAINE, RUSSIA BEEFS UP MILITARY IN ARMENIA AND KYRGYZSTAN

    Silk Road Reporters
    Oct 24 2014

    Published by John C. K. Daly
    October 24, 2014

    For years Russia has complained about what they describe as NATO's
    expansion eastward. Noted diplomat-historian George F. Kennan in 1997
    clearly foresaw the consequences of such actions when in 1997 he wrote
    in a newspaper commentary, "Expanding NATO would be the most fateful
    error of American policy in the post-Cold War era. Such a decision
    may be expected... to impel Russian foreign policy in directions
    decidedly not to our liking."

    The 1997 NATO Madrid Summit invited the first countries of the former
    Warsaw Pact - the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland - to join the
    alliance. Worse for Moscow was to follow. At the NATO Nov. 2002 Prague
    Summit, not only were former Warsaw Pact members Bulgaria, Romania,
    Slovakia and Slovenia invited to begin accession talks, but former USSR
    republics Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania as well. NATO membership for
    both Georgia and Ukraine has been discussed at subsequent summits,
    and at the most recent summit held in Britain Sept. 4-5 NATO's web
    page noted that the alliance "increased support to Ukraine in the wake
    of the crisis with Russia" and "continued condemnation of Russia's
    illegal and illegitimate 'annexation' of Crimea and destabilization
    of Eastern Ukraine."

    For better or worse, the Ukrainian crisis, which began late last year,
    has worsened Russian-Western relations to their lowest level since the
    1991 breakup of the USSR. Russia has now belatedly begun to push back,
    strengthening its bilateral relations with a number of post-Soviet
    republics and using both the Collective Security Treaty Organization
    (CSTO - current membership Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
    Russia and Tajikistan, observer states - Afghanistan and Serbia)
    and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO - member states China,
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan; observer
    states - Afghanistan, India, Iran, Mongolia and Pakistan; Dialogue
    Partners - Belarus, Sri Lanka and Turkey; guests - the Association of
    Southeast Asian Nations [ASEAN] and the Commonwealth of Independent
    States [CIS]) to increase its Eurasian military capabilities.

    On Oct. 15 Colonel General Viktor Bondarev, head of the Russian
    air force, briefed reporters on Moscow's intention to accelerate
    efforts to create a CSTO unified air defense network in response to
    the Ukrainian crisis reenergized NATO.

    The plans outlined by Bondarev indicate that NATO's intensifying
    of activities on Russia's periphery rather than cowing the Kremlin
    are instead leading to "impel Russian foreign policy in directions
    decidedly not to our liking." Bondarev stated that within Russia
    "By 2020... 47 airfields, including in Crimea and in the Arctic,
    will be renovated under the state armaments program," adding that by
    2025 the Russian air force will have restored and reopened over 100
    military airbases.

    Outlining plans outside Russia, negotiations with Vietnam, Cuba,
    Venezuela and Nicaragua to establish bases for Russian strategic
    bombers continue.

    Even before the conflict in Ukraine erupted, in 2013 Russian
    fighters were deployed to the Belarus Baranovichi airbase as part
    of the countries' integrated regional air defense network and Russia
    announced that it would station fighter aircraft at a Russian-built
    airbase in Lida, Belarus, near the border with Poland and Lithuania.

    Bondarev announced that the Russian air force now plans to establish
    a new airbase in the Belarusian city of Babruysk, which will be home
    to a squadron of Russian Su-27 fighters. As Belarus shares frontiers
    with NATO members Latvia, Lithuania and Poland, Moscow's message
    could hardly be more clear.

    It is in Russian aviation deployments further afield in the post-Soviet
    Caucasus and Central Asia CSTO member states that NATO will be unable
    to mount substantive countermeasures. In the Caucasus, Russian-Armenian
    relations have been fairly stable throughout the post-1991 era,
    with security and economics being the main areas of cooperation. As
    Azerbaijan has drifted over the last two decades into the Western
    orbit because of its energy wealth, Armenia has remained firmly allied
    to Russia, with the two nations emphasizing Russian involvement in
    negotiating a peaceful resolution to the Nagorno-Karabakh struggle
    as a co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group, which has been mediating
    the broader Azeri-Armenian conflict since March 1992.

    Given the strained nature of its relations with Azerbaijan and Turkey,
    Armenia sees military-political cooperation with Russia as an essential
    element of its security and defense policy. Besides Russian military
    bases in Armenia, Russian border guards assist Armenia in protecting
    its borders with Turkey and Iran. Armenia is an active CSTO member,
    the only member of the CSTO in the South Caucasus. Russia is also
    Armenia's main investor, with its total exceeding $3 billion through
    2012, mainly in the energy and communications sectors.

    Underlining Russia's deep involvement in Armenia's transport sector,
    a Feb. 2008 agreement between the Russian and Armenian governments
    transferred Armenian Railways to Russian Railways' subsidiary, South
    Caucasus Railways for 30 years. The agreement committed the Russians
    to investing $230 million in Armenia during the first five years of
    operations and subsequently an additional $240 million.

    Armenia also purchases natural gas from Russia at preferential rates,
    with only Belarus receiving a better price.

    In the wake of deteriorating Western-Russian relations over Ukraine,
    the Russian air force is upgrading the Soviet-era Erebuni airbase
    in Armenia, which houses the Russian 3624th Air Base and currently
    hosts a squadron of MiG-29 fighters and Mi-24 attack helicopters. As
    the Ukrainian crisis deepened, in Jan. the Russian Southern Military
    District press service confirmed that a contingent of Mi-24P attack
    helicopters, Mi-8MT and Mi-8SMV military transport helicopters were
    scheduled for deployment at Erebuni later in the year. Underlining
    Russia's strengthening presence in Armenia, 3,000 Russian and Armenian
    military personnel from Erebuni and other facilities on Oct. 13-19
    held military preparedness joint exercises, which included Erebuni
    MiG-29s, at Armenia's Kamhud and Alagyaz training facilities.

    Besides Erebuni, the Russian 102nd Military Base is in the Armenian
    city of Gyumri. In stark contrast to Ukraine's years-long haggling
    with Russia over the terms of its lease of Sevastopol for the Black
    Sea Fleet, in Aug. 2010, Russia and Armenia agreed to prolong the
    Gyumri lease agreement until 2044.

    Russia provides Armenia with armaments, investment and political
    support, for which Armenia reciprocates by providing territory
    for Russian military base deployment, thereby contributing to the
    preservation of Russia's presence in the South Caucasus. Since the
    Ukrainian crisis erupted, Russia's strengthening of its military
    presence in Armenia sends a strong message to neighboring NATO member
    Turkey, as well as NATO Partnership for Peace (PfP) associates Georgia
    and Azerbaijan.

    Farther east, Bondarev noted that Russia is negotiating with Kyrgyzstan
    to reconstruct the Kant airbase outside the capital Bishkek to support
    Russian strategic bombers, which currently houses a Russian fighter
    squadron under CSTO auspices.

    In many ways Kyrgyzstan and its air bases represents the height of
    the more than decade-old shadow "Great Game" conflict for Central Asia
    between Russia and the West, which began in earnest after the Sept.

    11, 2001 terrorist attacks in the U.S, after which Washington sought
    military access to Central Asia to mount military operations against
    the Taliban and al Qaeda in Afghanistan.

    The U.S. by the end of the year had acquired air bases at both
    Karshi-Khanabad in Uzbekistan and Manas in Kyrgyzstan, only to lose
    them later through inept foreign policy. The U.S.-Uzbekistan Status
    of Forces Agreement (SOFA), signed Oct. 6, 2001, less than a month
    after the 9-11 attacks, permitted the U.S. to station up to 1,500 U.S.

    troops at the Karshi-Khanabad (K2) airbase 90 miles north of the
    Afghan border. The following month, the Manas airbase was established
    on Dec. 4, 2001, under the joint Kyrgyz-U.S. SOFA.

    The Pentagon selected Manas above Kyrgyzstan's other 52 airports
    because its 14,000-foot runway, originally built for Soviet bombers,
    could be utilized by USAF C-5 Galaxy cargo planes and 747s to support
    Operation Enduring Freedom. In contrast, Russia's Kant airbase,
    12 miles outside Bishkek Kant and just 20 miles from Manas, was
    established in Oct. 2003, nearly two years later, its first military
    base outside the Russian Federation since the 1991 collapse of
    the USSR.

    In 2013, as events in Ukraine deteriorated, on Oct. 27 Russian air
    force commander Viktor Sevastianov, visiting Kant to mark the 10th
    anniversary of its founding, announced that the number of planes based
    at Kant, then consisting of 10 Sukhoi fighters, two Mi-8 helicopters
    and roughly a dozen other transport and training airplanes "will
    at least double by this December." The previous month Russia and
    Kyrgyzstan signed an agreement allowing the Russian air forces
    to continue operations at Kant until 2032 with possible five-year
    extensions, in exchange for Moscow's writing off $500 million in
    Kyrgyz debt.

    On July 29, 2005, due to Washington's mixed diplomatic signals
    straining relations over the May 2005 tragedy in Andijan, Uzbekistan,
    under the terms of the SOFA Uzbekistan told the U.S. to vacate K2,
    which was completed in Nov. 2005.

    After the departure of U.S. forces from Uzbekistan, Manas, 400 miles
    and 90-minutes flying time to Afghanistan, became the main hub for
    U.S. operations in Afghanistan, processing more than 5.3 million U.S.

    servicemen, 98 percent of all military personnel involved in Operation
    Enduring Freedom, with 1,200 U.S. servicemen performing aerial
    refueling, personnel and 42,000 cargo airlift missions, according to
    Colonel John Millard, commander of the 376th Air Expeditionary Wing
    and Manas base head.

    But Washington's inept policies towards Kyrgyzstan eventually soured
    bilateral relations over Manas. Kyrgyz complaints included inadequate
    rent, corrupt fuel contracts and environmental concerns. Things came to
    a head on Dec. 6, 2006, when 20year-old U.S. soldier Zachary Hatfield
    shot and killed 42 year-old Kyrgyz Aleksandr Ivanov, an ethnic Russian
    Kyrgyz, at the airbase's entry gate. Ivanov worked for Aerocraft Petrol
    Management, which provided fuel services for Kyrgyz and international
    civilian aircraft. Hatfield maintained that he fired in self-defense
    after Ivanov approached him with a knife. Despite promises to make
    Hatfield available to the Kyrgyz judicial system, the Pentagon whisked
    him out of the country, greatly angering the Kyrgyz population.

    In addition, Russia was offering various forms of financial assistance
    and soft loans which went unmatched by Washington, deeply mired in
    its dealings with corrupt President Kurmanbek Bakiyev, who in April
    2010 in the face of massive demonstrations fled the country. On
    Nov. 8 2011, newly elected President Almazbek Atambayev announced
    that he would close Manas when its lease ran out in 2014. On June 3,
    2014 American troops vacated the base and it was handed back.

    Not surprisingly, in the wake of NATO's expansion and Western protests
    over Ukraine, Russia is shoring up its military and economic presence
    in the post-Soviet space where possible, whether through bilateral
    arrangements or multilateral organizations such as CSTO. Given
    that on Oct. 10 Armenia joined the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) of
    Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan, launching on Jan. 1, 2015, which is
    dominated by the sheer weight of the Russian economy and Kyrgyzstan
    has applied as well, it seems certain only that Western influence in
    the Caucasus and Central Asia, particularly in Armenia and Kyrgyzstan
    can only diminish further, even as NATO steps up its patrols around
    Russia's borders.

    Dr. John C. K. Daly is a non-resident Fellow at the Johns Hopkins
    Central Asia Caucasus Institute in Washington DC.

    http://www.silkroadreporters.com/2014/10/24/ukraine-russia-beefs-military-armenia-kyrgyzstan/

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