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NATO Official Praises Growing Ties With Armenia

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  • NATO Official Praises Growing Ties With Armenia

    NATO OFFICIAL PRAISES GROWING TIES WITH ARMENIA
    By Hovannes Shoghikian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    March 12 2007

    Armenia has made considerable progress in developing its relations
    with NATO under the Individual Partnership Action Plan (IPAP) launched
    more than a year ago, a visiting senior NATO official said on Monday.

    "Quite recently I was looking into different documents, the assessment
    which is conducted on a periodic basis, and I was really struck by the
    dedication of your country to implementing the general framework of
    this IPAP and its different components," Jean Fournet, NATO's assistant
    secretary general for public diplomacy, told reporters in Yerevan.

    "I was also impressed by a report drafted by my colleagues from
    different departments of NATO who visited your country recently,"
    he added. "They came back from here with this very positive sign that
    you are on the right track."

    Fournet was speaking at a joint news conference with Foreign Minister
    Vartan Oskanian that followed a meeting between the two men.

    Implementation of Armenia's IPAP was high on the agenda of the talks.

    The policy framework, which was launched in December 2005, aims
    to step up Armenia's political and military cooperation with the
    U.S.-led alliance. In particular, Yerevan undertook to embark on a
    major reform of its armed forces that should bring their structure
    into greater conformity with NATO armies and thereby boost their
    interoperability with the latter. Another stated aim of the IPAP is
    the democratization of Armenia's political structure, strengthening
    of its judiciary and a fight against corruption.

    "Within one year a lot has been already achieved," said Fournet. The
    NATO official is scheduled to meet with other Armenian leaders
    on Tuesday.

    Oskanian, for his part, reiterated that membership in NATO is
    not on his government's foreign policy agenda. "[The IPAP's] full
    implementation will probably take a lot of time," her said. "So we
    concentrate on that document in developing our relations with NATO."

    The two men also officially inaugurated on Monday a NATO information
    center in Yerevan which is supposed to increase Armenians' awareness
    of the alliance and its goals. Oskanian said the center will also
    seek to explain to the local public that there is no contradiction
    between Armenia's drive to strengthen security ties with the West
    and its continued membership in the Russian-led Collective Security
    Treaty Organization.

    "Our policies of recent years have proved that there is no such
    contradiction," he said. "By means of this office we will be able to
    spread correct information about the mission of NATO and the essence
    of its cooperation with Armenia."
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