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No U.S. missiles on Armenian soil - deputy FM

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  • No U.S. missiles on Armenian soil - deputy FM

    No U.S. missiles on Armenian soil - deputy FM

    14:01|09/ 03/ 2007

    YEREVAN, March 9 (RIA Novosti) - Armenia's deputy foreign minister
    said Friday the Caucasus state was not considering the possibility of
    deploying elements of a U.S. missile defense system on its soil.

    A senior Pentagon official said March 1 that the United States would
    like to deploy a radar base in the post-Soviet Caucasus, without
    specifying in which country. The statement further strained relations
    with Moscow already unnerved by earlier reports of U.S. plans to
    deploy elements of a missile shield in Central Europe.

    "I would like to make an official statement that we have not received
    any inquiries or proposals on that score from the U.S. or NATO
    commanders," Arman Kirakosyan said.

    He said Armenia's Foreign Ministry was unaware whether such proposals
    had been made to Georgia and Azerbaijan, the ex-Soviet states in the
    region that Russia has singled out as the most probable sites for a
    U.S. radar.

    Both Georgia and Azerbaijan have said they know nothing of the plans.

    Kirakosyan said Washington was unlikely to approach Yerevan with such
    a proposal in the future.

    Armenia is a member of a post-Soviet security group, the Collective
    Security Treaty Organization, which is dominated by Russia and
    believed to have been created as a way of preventing NATO's further
    eastward expansion.

    The Caucasus state has also sought closer ties with NATO under an
    individual partnership program, which envisions joint exercises and
    training for the Armenian military.

    But in Armenia's territorial conflict with Azerbaijan over
    Nagorno-Karabakh, the alliance has tended to back the latter, saying
    that the region is under Armenian "military occupation." Conversely,
    Moscow is more supportive of Armenia on the issue.

    Russia, which is anxious about NATO bases emerging in former
    Communist-bloc countries and ex-Soviet republics, has blasted plans to
    deploy anti-missile systems in Poland, the Czech Republic and the
    Caucasus as a national security threat and a destabilizing factor in
    the world.

    Washington said the defenses would be designed to counter possible
    strikes from Iran, which is involved in long-running disputes with the
    international community over its nuclear programs.
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