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  • Gyumrui: We came to stay

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    March 17, 2006 Friday

    GYUMRUI: WE CAME TO STAY

    Source: Voyenno-Promyshlenny Kurier, No 10, March 15 - 21, 2006, p. 4
    Translated by A. Ignatkin


    Arms and military hardware withdrawn from Georgia will go to the
    102nd Military Base

    by Oleeg Falichev

    THE RUSSIAN-ARMENIAN MILITARY COOPERATION IS FRUITFUL; An update on
    Armenia, Russia's strategic partner beyond the Caucasus Range.


    There is a country beyond the Caucasus Range that unlike Georgia is a
    bona fide strategic partner of Russia. This is Armenia. Russia and
    Armenia signed Treaty on friendship, cooperation, and mutual
    assistance (August 29, 1997). Both countries are signatories of the
    Collective Security Treaty. The 102nd Russian Military Base is
    quartered in Armenia and the border with Turkey and Iran is manned by
    Russian border guards. President Vladimir Putin and Robert Kocharjan
    proclaimed 2006, the Year of Armenia in Russia.

    Armenian historians and politicians are out to have the international
    community and first and foremost Turkey recognize genocide of the
    Armenians in 1915.

    Turkey convened several international conferences on genocide of the
    Armenians in the Osmanian Empire not long ago. It indicates
    recognition in Turkey of the fact that the process acknowledgement of
    the genocide even by the countries like Latvia, Poland, and Slovakia
    that do not boast of large Armenian diasporas cannot be stopped
    anymore. Moreover, normal relations with all neighbors is one of the
    requirements for membership in the European Union Ankara has coveted.
    All the same, Turkey's stand on the matter remains unchanged. It does
    not even intend to open the border with Armenia, a fact that cannot
    help affecting the situation in the region.

    The situation on the border with Iran is much better. On the other
    hand, the international situation Iran is in nowadays may
    automatically generate problems for Armenia should the United States
    decide to strike at Iran. It is therefore necessary to understand
    Armenia's interests. It does not appear however, that the Armenian
    leadership is giving any thought to the matter even though a great
    deal will depend on Armenia's position in escalation of the
    American-Iranian conflict. After all, Armenia is the territory that
    may be used for the strike at Iran. No wonder the Americans are
    discussing the use of the territory of Azerbaijan with official Baku.
    As a matter of fact, neither is it possible nowadays to predict all
    consequences of appearance of peacekeepers in the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict area. In short, there are lots of reasons that might turn
    Armenia into an arena of regional wars - not to mention possibility
    of a war in Nagorno-Karabakh itself where battalions stand poised and
    ready...

    Tension is rapidly mounting in yet another area close to Armenia. The
    matter concerns Djavakhetia in Georgia, a region with an ethnic
    Armenian population, Russian troops are leaving nowadays. The
    Armenian are forced to leave too. There will be no jobs to be found
    in Akhalkalaki once the Russians are gone. Ashot Melkonjan, Director
    of the Institute of History, is convinced that the security concept
    of the Republic of Armenia must account for the problem of
    Djavakhetia too.

    The Armenian population of Samtskhe-Djavakhetia regularly brought up
    the matter of the status of autonomy after 1992, and inevitably
    encountered all sorts of difficulties and obstacles. As for the
    Russian base in Akhalkalaki (a district center in Djavakhetia) it is
    about to be withdrawn. NATO troops will probably move in once the
    Russian military is gone and they may include a Turkish contingent.

    Deputy Premier and Defense Minister, Sergei Ivanov, visited Yerevan
    in early 2006. Russian contracts for enterprises in Armenia turned
    over to Russia for debts were discussed.

    Ivanov visited the 102nd Military Base as well and said that
    everything possible was done to improve combat readiness of the
    Russian-Armenian army group within the framework of the bilateral
    military cooperation. "Military-technical cooperation is successful
    as well," Ivanov said.

    Armenian officers and trainees are being trained in Russian military
    academies and colleges free of charge as of January 1, 2005. They
    number almost 500 men nowadays. Now that Russia is withdrawing
    military hardware from Georgia, it is common knowledge that some of
    them will be moved to the 102nd Military Base. It does not mean that
    all of that will remain in Armenia for good. The assumption that
    Russia is arming its ally is incorrect. After all, blockade of
    railroads has a disruptive effect on supplies to the Russian base in
    Armenia and therefore on combat training. Munitions are at high
    premium, saved whenever possible even in the course of live fire
    practice.

    The 1997 Treaty, between Russia and Armenia was followed by 45
    military treaties between our countries (15 international, 20
    treaties between governments and 10 between ministries and
    departments). Six documents were ratified: Treaty on friendship,
    cooperation, and mutual assistance; Treaty on the Russian military
    base in Armenia; Agreement of the use of arms by servicemen of the
    Russian base beyond its territory; Agreement on joint planning of
    forces (means) in the interests of collective security; Agreement on
    legal aspects of existence of the Russian military base and on mutual
    legal assistance; Protocol No 4 on amendment to the Treaty on the
    Russian military base in Armenia.

    Negotiations between military delegations and meetings of defense
    ministers are planned and regular. Chief of the General Staff,
    General of the Army Yuri Baluyevsky, visited Armenia in 2005. Major
    General S. Bainetov, Chief of the Flights Security Service of the
    Russian Air Force, and Armenian Deputy Defense Minister Lieutenant
    General A. Mirzabekjan met in Yerevan and signed an accord on
    security of flights. Armenia is the only country in the Caucasus that
    possesses sophisticated S-300s.

    An important meeting of the Russian-Armenian working group took place
    in Yerevan in August 2005, when financial aspects of the Russian
    military presence in the Republic of Armenia were discussed and
    decided on. It is common knowledge that Russian servicemen do not pay
    for communal services and for the land they are using as shooting
    ranges and testing sites. No other Russian military base abroad
    enjoys this treatment.

    Meeting of the CIS Council of Defense Ministers took place in Moscow
    on November 30, 2005. Defense ministers of Russia and Armenia signed
    a protocol between the governments of our countries on amendments of
    the Accord on sites of the Russian military base in Armenia and
    procedures of allocation of land plots. Working meetings of groups
    for military and military-technical cooperation took place in Moscow
    and Yerevan. Experts of foreign ministries of Russia and Armenia met
    to discuss foreign political plans.

    Joint actions should be commented on as well. The matter concerns
    regular exercises for the command of the United Army Group, joint
    exercises (on maps) with the United Command of the United Army Group,
    conferences with senior officers of the Armed Forces of Armenia,
    joint field exercises...

    Generally speaking. The Russian-Armenian military cooperation is
    fruitful. It will continue and advance. All of that proves that
    Armenia had been and remains Russia's outpost in the Caucasus.
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