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There will be a new war in TransCaucasia!

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  • There will be a new war in TransCaucasia!

    WPS Agency, Russia
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    December 24, 2010 Friday


    THERE WILL BE A NEW WAR IN TRANSCAUCASIA!


    Source: Voenno-Promyshlenny Kuryer, No. 50, December 22-28, 2010, p. 4
    by Alexander Khramchikhin
    [translated from Russian]


    EXPERTS SEE LESS AND LESS PROSPECTS FOR PEACEFUL RESOLVING OF THE
    NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT; Situation regarding Nagorno-Karabakh is
    getting rapidly worse. Armenia and Azerbaijan may start the
    hostilities at any moment. This war may have terrible consequences.

    Rhetoric dedicated to the Nagorno-Karabakh problems has been getting
    much harsher both in Yerevan and Baku lately. Azerbaijani President
    Ilham Aliyev says increasingly often that his country is ready to
    solve the Nagorno-Karabakh problem by the military way because it
    cannot do this peacefully. In turn, President of Armenia Serzh
    Sargsian states that Yerevan will recognize independence of
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic if Baku unleashes hostilities again it.

    It is reported that mobilization has already begun in Armenian and
    Azerbaijani Diasporas. Firing exchanges that lead to human losses and
    are accompanied with mutual accusations of breaching of the truce
    appear on the contact line regularly.

    They have armed themselves thoroughly

    So, it is interesting to study the balance of forces of the parties of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    After breakup of the USSR, Armenia, Azerbaijan and self-proclaimed
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic acquired certain shares of the heritage of
    the Soviet Army.

    Having divided the Soviet quota set by the Conventional Forces in
    Europe Treaty (CFE), Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, Georgia,
    Armenia, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan received their own quotas for
    armament and military hardware. For example, all three Transcaucasian
    countries were permitted to have 220 tanks, 220 combat armored
    vehicles, 285 artillery systems, 100 combat airplanes and 50 strike
    helicopters each.

    In reality, after breakup of the USSR Azerbaijan received 436 tanks,
    947 combat armored vehicles (558 fighting infantry vehicles and 389
    armored personnel carriers), 388 artillery systems, 63 airplanes, 8
    helicopters. At the beginning of 1993, Armenia had only 77 tanks, 189
    combat armored vehicles (150 fighting infantry vehicles and 39 armored
    personnel carriers), 160 artillery systems, 3 airplanes, 13
    helicopters. Along with this, Nagorno-Karabakh was a kind of "gray
    zone." Armenian forces there got hold of a small quantity of armament
    of the disbanded Transcaucasian Military District. Yerevan also
    transferred some unregistered models of armament and military hardware
    to Stepanakert.

    Despite the obvious superiority in forces and means, Azerbaijanis were
    defeated in the war of 1992-1994. Armenians established control not
    only over almost entire former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region of
    the Azerbaijani Soviet Socialist Republic but also adjacent districts
    of Azerbaijan proper. Before the war, Nagorno-Karabakh has not been
    connected with Armenia. There is a common border between them now on
    account of the occupied Azerbaijani districts.

    When a truce began on the frontline, it turned out that the parties
    bore significant losses during the war. Thus, Armenia recognized loss
    of 52 tanks T-72, 54 fighting infantry vehicles, 40 armored personnel
    carriers, six guns and mortars (losses of the troops of
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic were unknown). Azerbaijan lost 186 tanks
    (160 - T-72 and 26 - T-55), 111 fighting infantry vehicles, 8 armored
    personnel carriers, 7 self-propelled artillery mounts, 47 guns and
    mortars, 5 multiple rocket launcher systems, 14-16 airplanes, 5-6
    helicopters. Soon after signing of the truce Azerbaijan also had to
    write off the following hardware damaged in battles: 43 tanks
    (including 18 T-72), 83 fighting infantry vehicles, 31 armored
    personnel carriers, 1 self-propelled artillery mount, 42 guns and
    mortars, 8 multiple rocket launcher systems.

    However, Azerbaijanis managed to take more than 20 T-72, 14 fighting
    infantry vehicles, 1 self-propelled artillery mount, 8 guns and
    mortars from Armenians. Along with this, a lot of the hardware lost by
    the Azerbaijani forces was taken by the enemy either in full repair or
    with insignificant damages.

    Of course, in the first half of the 1990s the newly formed army of
    Azerbaijan does not resemble regular troops very much and looked more
    like guerilla forces (even despite that it had tanks, artillery and
    aviation). In any case, it is impossible to explain the defeat by this
    circumstance alone because it is possible to say the same about the
    opponent.

    Since then, armies of all three parties of the conflict passed a big
    evolution towards transformation into regular armed forces. For
    Armenia Russia was the most important source of import of military
    hardware and something was bought in Eastern Europe. Besides, Yerevan
    became the only buyer of Chinese multiple rocket launcher system WM-80
    (four systems were supplied) that China copied from Russian Smerch
    without any license.

    Due to the oil revenues Azerbaijan worked on modernization of the
    armed forces much more energetically because its military budget was
    300% bigger than that of Armenia. Kiev claims the role of the main
    supplier of armament to Baku. Along with this, Azerbaijan bought
    weapons in many countries including Russia. In 2006, Russia sold 62
    secondhand T-72 tanks to Azerbaijan.

    As a result, Azerbaijan turned out to be the only of the 30 CFE member
    states that exceeded its quotas in two classes of armament
    simultaneously: tanks (381 as of January 1 of 2010) and artillery (425
    artillery systems). Baku also recognizes existence of 181 combat
    armored vehicles, 75 combat airplanes and 15 strike helicopters in its
    army.

    As to Armenia, judging by the data that it provides in the framework
    of the CFE, the quantitative parameters of its armed forces have
    remained stable for many years. According to Yerevan as of January 1
    of 2010, the Armenian army had 110 tanks, 140 combat armored vehicles,
    239 artillery systems 16 airplanes and 8 helicopters.

    Along with this, the "gray zone" of Nagorno-Karabakh did not
    disappear. According to Azerbaijani sources, the armed forces of the
    unrecognized republic have 316 tanks, 324 combat armored vehicles and
    322 artillery systems. Along with this, the amazing stability of
    quantity of the military hardware in the army of Armenia demonstrates
    that at least a part of the models of armament and military hardware
    purchased by Yerevan is transferred to Stepanakert.

    Our matter is non-interference

    If we speak about the strategic allies of each of the parties, for
    Yerevan this is Moscow and for Baku this is Ankara. However,
    Azerbaijan does not border Turkey and has Russia as the northern
    neighbor. Armenia has a directly opposite situation: it is separated
    from Russia by hundreds of kilometers but Turkey borders it from the
    south.

    In any case, the 102nd Russian military base located in Gyumri
    compensates for remoteness of Russia. The base has about 100 tanks, up
    to 300 fighting infantry vehicles and armored personnel carriers
    approximately 20 self-propelled artillery mounts and 20 multiple
    rocket launcher systems. The group of Russian forces also has 18
    fighters MiG-29 (at the 3624th air base in Erebuni) and an air defense
    missile brigade of S-300V (there are only four brigades armed with
    these systems in Russia proper).

    Yerevan not only does not demand payment for rent of the base from
    Moscow but also actually pays for its maintenance. There is also a
    significant quantity of Armenians having Russian citizenship serving
    in the Russian group of forces. It is clear that in case of emergency
    they will defend their compatriots actively.

    Armenia is a CSTO member state. Hence, in case of a war (at least, if
    Azerbaijan starts it) Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan,
    Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan are obliged to help it. However, there are
    practically no doubts that this will not happen in reality. Due to the
    oil and gas problems that do not let Moscow quarrel with Baku
    seriously (like it has been said above, it even supplies offensive
    armament to Azerbaijan) and simply because of unwillingness to get
    involved into a big-scale conflict Russian authorities will refer to a
    "good excuse" saying that Azerbaijan attacks not Armenia but
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic. It will be "forgotten" immediately how an
    absolutely similar behavior of Georgia in 2008, an attack at South
    Ossetia not recognized by anyone, has been declared treacherous
    aggression by Moscow. To imagine that other CSTO member states will
    help Armenia is so absurd that it is pointless to discuss this.

    Along with this, Turkey does not wish to participate in hostilities
    too, first, due to a noticeable improvement of relations with Armenia,
    second, due to a risk of direct military clash with Russia (there is a
    group of the Russian forces in Armenia). Turkish leaders will say that
    the conflict has been started by Azerbaijan and this is very bad.

    During the previous Armenian-Azerbaijani war Iran has shown that
    "Islamic solidarity" was a chimera and supported not Moslem (moreover
    Shiite) Azerbaijan but Orthodox Christian Armenia. This was explained
    by extremely bad relations between Tehran and Ankara, the main patron
    of Baku. The Iranian-Turkish and Iranian-Azerbaijani relations grew
    noticeably better by now but the Iranian-Armenian relations did not
    get worse too. There are no grounds to doubt that Tehran will remain
    neutral.

    We should not forget about the West. Its position will be influenced
    by two opposite factors: powerful Armenian Diaspora (especially in the
    US and France) and exceptional importance of Azerbaijan for numerous
    oil and gas projects and plans to retain the status of the main
    suppler of hydrocarbons alternative to the Russian ones. However,
    military interference of the US, leaving apart European countries, is
    absolutely ruled out. The West together with Russia will ardently
    demand Yerevan and Baku to stop the war immediately.

    To be continued in the next issue of the bulletin




    From: A. Papazian
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