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Armenian army strongest in region - military aide

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  • Armenian army strongest in region - military aide

    Golos Armenii, Yerevan,
    27 Jan 2007


    Armenian army strongest in region - military aide


    The Armenian army is well-trained and well-equipped, a top military
    aide to the Armenian president has said. Col-Gen Gurgen Dalibaltayan,
    the chief inspector of the Armenian army, said that according to
    international experts, the Armenian army is the strongest one in the
    South Caucasus region. He also said that while some of the service
    personnel serve on a contract basis in the army, the Armenian army
    will not become a fully professional one in the near future, The
    following is an excerpt from Zara Gevorgyan's report by the Armenian
    newspaper Golos Armenii on 27 January headlined "We were waging a
    liberation war and at the same time, setting up an army in the home
    front":

    The adviser to the Armenian president and the chief military
    inspector of the Republic of Armenia, Col-Gen Gurgen Dalibaltayan,
    has answered questions put by a Golos Armenii correspondent.

    [Correspondent] Gurgen Harutyunovich, the Armenian army will
    celebrate its 15th anniversary on 28 January. Let's recall how
    everything started and how the Armenian army formed, grew and
    strengthened out of several militia detachments.

    [Dalibaltayan] In May 1991, the Armenian government set up a defence
    committee that started putting together detachments of volunteers and
    planned, directed and organized the range and zone of their
    activities.

    ...

    [Correspondent] We often proudly say that the Armenian army is the
    strongest and most organized one in the region.

    [Dalibaltayan] This is what international experts say, who, when
    comparing the armed forces of the South Caucasus countries, have
    always put the Armenian army in the first place. Recently, a Western
    military specialist said that there are "armed forces in Georgia and
    Azerbaijan, and an army in Armenia". What is the difference? If you
    give weapons to any grouping it will sooner or later become "an armed
    force", while a classic army is a far deeper and complete notion.

    [Correspondent] So, we proudly say that our army is the strongest in
    the region. However, time goes on. Foreigners invest a lot of money
    in the Georgian army; Azerbaijan's army expenses grow constantly.
    Should I continue my question?

    [Dalibaltayan] No, it is clear. The Americans have assumed the
    patronage of the Georgian army and train it in the NATO style.
    However, that type of an army is not too strong, and the sense of
    patriotism (the most important thing) is far weaker compared to the
    army that is established in its own homeland and rests on the
    experience of generations and the strength of its soil. Today
    Azerbaijan is able to spend a lot of money on its military, but
    having top military hardware does not mean having a top army. We
    spend less, but the money is strictly directed (for the needs of
    troops, weapons and replacement of obsolete weapons with new ones)
    without wasting money on secondary goals. Armenia really has an army
    the military might of which is the key condition for peace.

    [Correspondent] Do we have domestic weaponry manufactured here in
    Armenia?

    [Dalibaltayan] Armenia has appropriate factories. We, however, buy
    weapons from Russia because it is cheaper to do so. It is more
    expensive to manufacture them here than import them. However, we can
    always manufacture rifles, mortars; to cut it short, everything but
    heavy hardware. There is nothing to worry about in that respect; we
    can have everything we need. By the way, there are also repair
    facilities in Armenia, which are constantly modernized. Military
    hardware is constantly modernized in those facilities in accordance
    with new modern technologies.

    [Correspondent] Is Armenia going to manufacture hardware in the
    future?

    [Dalibaltayan] It is envisaged in the plan of mobilization training.

    [Correspondent] I know that the service personnel of some units will
    serve as contractors. Tell me more about it.

    [Dalibaltayan] It is true. These will be people who have served in
    the army and transferred into reserve. They will continue working as
    contractors. Therefore, as you understand, we are not increasing the
    personnel. Those units currently serve on our state borders, while
    the young serve inside Armenian territory. However, it is very
    difficult to implement that system completely. The Americans made
    their army professional only after the Vietnam War. And that country
    is very rich. That kind of a change for an army is a very expensive
    process, which we cannot afford at this stage. However, it is worth
    it because having a professional army is better in the long run. This
    is, however, in the future. At this stage, it is better for us to
    accumulate mobilization resources.
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