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Armenian Troops In Iraq Again Rotated

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  • Armenian Troops In Iraq Again Rotated

    ARMENIAN TROOPS IN IRAQ AGAIN ROTATED
    By Hovannes Shoghikian and Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    July 18 2007

    Armenia sent 46 non-combat troops to Iraq on Wednesday in a regular
    rotation of its small military contingent that joined the U.S.-led
    occupation force there more than two years ago.

    The army truck drivers, demining experts, medics and other military
    personnel will replace the same number of their comrades who have
    completed their six month tour of duty in Iraq and will be flown back
    to Yerevan later this month. The Armenian contingent is part of a
    Polish-led multinational division deployed in mainly Shia-populated
    areas south of Baghdad.

    "What your detachment is doing is a continuation of a fight for
    survival that characterizes the modern history of the Armenian people,"
    Colonel-General Seyran Ohanian, chief of the Armenian army's General
    Staff, told the departing troops during a farewell ceremony.

    "Your mission demonstrates that Armenia can not only defend itself
    but contribute to global security."

    Ohanian went on to compare Armenian soldiers' service in Iraq and
    Kosovo with Armenian "feats" during the continuing military conflict
    with Azerbaijan. "Your battalion has successfully performed its tasks
    in Iraq and Kosovo, and I believe that, if necessary, we can do so
    in other conflict zones as well," he said, referring to the special
    army unit that provides troops to the first-ever Armenian military
    missions abroad.

    The head of the Armenian Defense Ministry's foreign relations
    department, Major-General Mikael Melkonian, announced in May that
    Yerevan is considering increasing the number of its peace-keeping
    troops in Kosovo and joining the NATO-led military mission in
    Afghanistan. He said it is currently discussing the issue with the
    governments of Britain and Greece.

    Ohanian also did not rule out the possibility of an Armenian deployment
    in Afghanistan and a troop increase in Kosovo. "The Defense Ministry
    has made no such decision yet," he told reporters.

    Earlier this year, the U.S. military donated a mobile field hospital to
    the Armenian peacekeeping battalion. The then U.S. charge d'affaires
    in Yerevan, Anthony Godfrey, said during its inauguration in February
    that the assistance is meant to facilitate "future Armenian military
    deployments with coalition or NATO forces" in various conflict zones
    and Afghanistan in particular.

    On Tuesday, the government of Germany, a major contributor to the NATO
    force in Afghanistan, similarly donated nine tons of medical equipment
    to the Armenian military. A senior Defense Ministry official said the
    "humanitarian assistance" will enable Armenia to deploy and fully
    equip another military hospital "in field conditions."
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