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Baku Stakes At The Army: Azerbaijan Increases Its Military Expenditu

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  • Baku Stakes At The Army: Azerbaijan Increases Its Military Expenditu

    BAKU STAKES AT THE ARMY: AZERBAIJAN INCREASES ITS MILITARY EXPENDITURES
    by Sohbet Mamedov, Alexander Zhelenin

    Agency WPS
    Nezavisimaya Gazeta
    September 10, 2007 Monday
    Russia

    Defense And Security

    Azerbaijan is going to solve the Nagorno-Karabakh problem with
    assistance of the armed forces; Azerbaijan received a new argument in
    the dialogue with Armenia about the "occupied territories." President
    Ilham Aliev has said that Baku stakes at the army and will increase
    the military article of the state budget in the future. Expenditures
    on the armed forces will exceed $1 billion. According to the President
    of Azerbaijan, such measures are dictated by the situation because
    "the country is in a state of war."

    Azerbaijan received a new argument in the dialogue with Armenia about
    the "occupied territories." President Ilham Aliev has said that Baku
    stakes at the army and will increase the military article of the state
    budget in the future. Expenditures on the armed forces will exceed $1
    billion. According to the President of Azerbaijan, such measures are
    dictated by the situation because "the country is in a state of war."

    Baku is not going to keep tolerating the occupation of about 20% of
    its territory which has continued for almost 15 years. President of
    Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliev, announced this at a consultation dedicated
    to "problems of refugees and migrants driven from their native
    lands as a result of the military aggression of Armenia against
    Azerbaijan." Aliev holds these consultations once a year and they are
    usually dedicated to the settlement of certain issues and a discussion
    of the negotiation process on resolving the "Armenian-Azerbaijani
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict." Azerbaijani authorities insist on exactly
    this definition when they speak about the conflict between the two
    neighboring countries. The current speech of the president means
    that Baku is discontent with the negotiation process. The President
    of Azerbaijan states, "Armenia should understand that drawing out
    the conflict may cause more serious consequences." He added that
    he instructed the relevant agencies to plan an amount exceeding $1
    billion in the state budget for 2008 for the needs of the army.

    According to official data, there are 75,000 servicemen in the armed
    forces of Azerbaijan now. The present-day Azerbaijani army is well
    trained and is armed with modern armament and military hardware. The
    restoration of the military industrial complex is being done quickly.

    According to Yashar Dzhafarli, chair of the public association of
    officers of the reserve and retired officers, in case of beginning a
    second war, an attack on the Azerbaijani forces will be done not only
    towards Nagorno-Karabakh and the seven occupied districts around it
    but along the entire perimeter of the border with Armenia.

    Alexander Sharavin, director of the analytical department of the
    institute of political and military analysis, says that "although
    the military budget of Azerbaijan is bigger than the entire budget
    of Armenia, it is difficult to imagine that Azerbaijan has really
    acquired such military might that it can defeat Nagorno-Karabakh."

    The expert adds that Azerbaijan, like the other Transcaucasian
    republics, is a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organization
    and to achieve a serious advantage over Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh
    it will need to quit the treaty.

    In turn, Ivan Safranchuk, director of the Russian representative office
    of the institute of international security, explains the statements
    of Aliev saying that "after opening the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil
    pipeline, Azerbaijan felt its importance for Europe and the West as a
    whole." According to Safranchuk, Europe encountered the blackmailing
    of a transit country like Azerbaijan for the first time. This meant
    that Europeans encountered what Russia had experienced in its relations
    with the Ukraine and Belarus through the territories of which Russian
    gas and oil were flowing to the West.

    Safranchuk adds that now Azerbaijan "as supplier and transit country
    for energy resources supply to the West starts bringing its issues"
    to the agenda of Europe and does this very harshly and not only in
    the field of energy.
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