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Concern In Baku Over Russia-Georgia-Armenia Military Transit

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  • Concern In Baku Over Russia-Georgia-Armenia Military Transit

    CONCERN IN BAKU OVER RUSSIA-GEORGIA-ARMENIA MILITARY TRANSIT

    EurasiaNet.org
    March 16 2015

    March 15, 2015 - 7:01pm, by Joshua Kucera

    Recent reports that Russian military vehicles were appearing in Georgia
    have raised complaints in neighboring Azerbaijan that Tbilisi is
    "betraying" Baku by allowing the Russian military to ship military
    supplies into Armenia via its territory or airspace.

    The story of the Russian vehicles in Georgia is almost certainly a
    tempest in a teapot - after footage surfaced of Russian-made ZIL 131
    military trucks on Georgian streets, various theories quickly emerged.

    Georgia's opposition claimed the trucks were evidence that the current
    government was in cahoots with Moscow, while some suggested they may
    be on the way to Armenia, where Russia both has its own large military
    base and provides substantial military aid to the armed forces there.

    But it didn't take long for another, more banal explanation to come
    out: the vehicles were decommissioned in Russia and are being sold
    on the commercial market.

    There's no indication that the Russian trucks were in fact destined
    for Armenia, but the question of how Russia supplies its base in
    Armenia, as well as delivers military aid there, has long been a
    secretive and contentious one. Armenia is separated from Russia by
    Azerbaijan and Turkey, which are hostile to Armenia, and Georgia,
    which is hostile to Russia. Georgia nevertheless did allow overflights
    of Russian military shipments to Armenia until 2011, when it publicly
    annulled the agreement with Russia allowing for that transit. The
    status of that transit is now unclear, though there have been various
    unconfirmed reports that it was reinstated even while former president
    Mikheil Saakashvili was in power.

    Azerbaijani analyst Mubariz Ahmedoglu, in a Baku press conference
    March 5, accused Georgia of "betraying" Azerbaijan by allowing the
    transit. "Chronic problems in the Azerbaijan-Georgia relationship have
    shown themselves cumulatively. Georgia never expresses real support for
    Azerbaijan's territorial integrity. The only support is rhetorical,"
    Ahmedoglu said. He argued further that Georgia's government is going
    along with a Russian plan to annex Armenia via the Georgian occupied
    territories.

    "Georgian officials can resort to sophistry to claim that the transit
    of military hardware via Georgia to Armenia does not pose a threat for
    Azerbaijan and Georgia. However, the incumbent Georgian leadership
    created the biggest threat for itself. This is both a military and
    geopolitical threat," Ahmedoglu said.

    It's not clear to what extent Ahmedoglu's views represent those in the
    government, but the fact that in Azerbaijan's increasingly repressive
    environment he held a press conference covered by pro-government
    media suggests it has official sanction.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/72531

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