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Not Armenia But Azerbaijan Violates "Agreement On Limitation Of Conv

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  • Not Armenia But Azerbaijan Violates "Agreement On Limitation Of Conv

    NOT ARMENIA BUT AZERBAIJAN VIOLATES "AGREEMENT ON LIMITATION OF CONVENTIONAL ARMAMENTS IN EUROPE," FORMER RA DEFENCE MINISTER SAYS

    Noyan Tapan
    Jan 18 2007

    YEREVAN, JANUARY 18, NOYAN TAPAN. The "Agreement On Violation of
    Conventional Armaments in Europe" envisages that any country being
    agreement's participant has the right and possibility to check another
    country-participant.

    Lieutenant-General Vagharshak Haroutiunian, former RA Defence Minister,
    declared this in his interview to NT correspondent, commenting
    upon recent statements of Azerbaijani officials. In his words, the
    agreement signed within the framework of OSCE envisages holding of
    annual obligatory inspections of agreement's country-participants.

    In particular, he meant the statement of Zahid Oruj, member of
    Azerbaijani parliamentary Commission on Security and Defence, according
    to which Azerbaijan is going to raise a question on creating a special
    inspection within the framework of NATO and OSCE for investigating and
    preventing facts of increasing armaments by Armenia, which violates
    the "Agreement On Limitation of Conventional Armaments in Europe."

    V.Haroutiunian considers that it is Azerbaijan that violates the
    agreement and the Armenian Defence Ministry has repeatedly declared
    this. In particular, in his words, Azerbaijan has violated and
    continues to violate the agreement on two out of five parameters:
    on quotas on tanks and armoured cars.

    To recap, the "Agreement On Limitation of Conventional Armaments in
    Europe" was signed by Soviet Union in 1990. Subsequently, as a result
    of collapse of the USSR, the agreement was adapted to new conditions,
    according to which quotas for heavy armament (the countries cannot have
    more than 220 tanks, 220 armoured cars and 150 artillery systems) and
    aviation (no more than 100 fighting planes and 50 fighting helicopters)
    are established in the armed forces of Armenia and Azerbaijan.
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