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Jane's: Azerbaijan Attack On Karabakh Unlikely -- For Now

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  • Jane's: Azerbaijan Attack On Karabakh Unlikely -- For Now

    JANE'S: AZERBAIJAN ATTACK ON KARABAKH UNLIKELY -- FOR NOW
    by Joshua Kucera

    EurasiaNet
    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/63030
    March 8 2011
    NY

    The Bug PitArmeniaAzerbaijanNagorno Karabakh The Armenia-Azerbaijan
    military balance is getting a lot of scrutiny these days, and Jane's
    Intelligence Review has just published a good reported analysis
    (subscription required) by Emil Sanamyan that has a lot of interesting
    points. Among them:

    -- "Upon closer inspection, Azerbaijan's purported 'military budget'
    incorporates not just the paramilitary forces outside the Ministry of
    Defence but also state prosecutors and even courts, with an apparent
    intention to inflate the overall figure for propaganda effect."

    -- "The combined Armenian and Nagorno-Karabakh defence army total
    is estimated by Jane's to be around 300 T-72s, considerably larger
    than the 110 officially declared by Yerevan. Azerbaijan is thought to
    maintain around 350 to 400 T-72s... Baku has declared only 217 tanks,
    although it it likely that this figure was designed to appear under
    the Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) treaty ceiling of 220."

    -- "[F]or now it is the Azerbaijani UAV capability that provides the
    most immediate potential for escalation. Armenian defence officials
    have confirmed that Azerbaijan has begun flying its UAVs close to
    the Line of Contact that separates the two sides, with several such
    flights reported since 2008. In mid-2010, two Armenian Su-25s were
    dispatched to try to intercept these UAV flights."

    -- "Armenian officials also claim that Armenia has begun to
    domestically produce UAVs and that more than a dozen have already
    entered service, with the aim of co-ordinating artillery fire. These
    have yet to be seen publicly."

    But he concluded that, in the short term at least, war was unlikely.

    That's because Azerbaijan's ability to strike Armenian targets from a
    distance -- either from the air or with artillery -- is still too weak
    to overwhelm Armenians' defenses. The Armenian/Karabakh air defense
    systems are relatively good (they have S-300s, including possibly
    in Karabakh) and Azerbaijan has a fairly small number of ground
    attack aircraft (according to Jane's, 19 Su-25s) which would quickly
    be depleted by the Armenians' air defense. Azerbaijan's artillery,
    which also might be used to take out air defenses, would be vulnerable
    to Armenian artillery counterattacks, as the two sides are somewhat
    evenly matched on that front. So at this point, Sanamyan says, it's
    too risky for Azerbaijan to attack. For now.




    From: A. Papazian
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