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Azerbaijan Gets 85 Percent Of Its Weapons From Russia

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  • Azerbaijan Gets 85 Percent Of Its Weapons From Russia

    REPORT: AZERBAIJAN GETS 85 PERCENT OF ITS WEAPONS FROM RUSSIA

    EurasiaNet.org
    March 18 2015

    March 17, 2015 - 10:27pm,
    by Joshua Kucera

    Azerbaijan was the second-largest arms importer in Europe over the past
    five years, according to a new report from the Stockholm International
    Peace Research Institute, an arms trade research group.

    Azerbaijan accounted for fully 13 percent of all of Europe's arms
    imports over the last five years, SIPRI reported, behind only the U.K.

    (The report doesn't list dollar values for the imports.)

    While overall arms imports have been decreasing across Europe,
    Azerbaijan is bucking the trend: its imports of weaponry increased
    249 percent in the period 2010-2014 when compared to the previous
    five-year period, 2005-2009.

    SIPRI also tabulated the world trade in drones ("unmanned aerial
    vehicles" in military-speak) and Azerbaijan also ended up near the
    top of that list, as the fourth-largest importer of drones in the
    world since 1985, trailing only the U.K., India, and Italy. It also
    scored impressively in another SIPRI survey from last year, tallying
    the second-largest increase in defense budgets in the world over the
    past ten years.

    Among the most eye-popping numbers from the newest report: 85 percent
    of Azerbaijan's arms imports came from Russia. Russian sales of arms
    to Azerbaijan has been a sore subject in Armenia, which is bracing
    for renewed conflict with Azerbaijan over the disputed territory of
    Nagorno Karabakh and which is supposed to be Russia's closest ally
    in the region. Recently even Armenia's pro-Russian Foreign Minister
    Edward Nalbandian complained about Russian arms sales to Baku.

    But Azerbaijan also imports weapons from other countries like Israel,
    Turkey, and Ukraine. That Russia dwarfs all of these is somewhat
    surprising, and illustrates just how strong Russia's ties to the
    militaries of the post-Soviet states are, even in a country like
    Azerbaijan that's not particularly closely allied to Moscow.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/72581



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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