Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

BAKU: Azerbaijan's Defence Ministry Talks Tough On Karabakh

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • BAKU: Azerbaijan's Defence Ministry Talks Tough On Karabakh

    AZERBAIJAN'S DEFENCE MINISTRY TALKS TOUGH ON KARABAKH

    news.az
    Aug 17, 2011
    Azerbaijan

    Azerbaijan has dismissed claims from breakaway Karabakh that it would
    lose if hostilities were to be resumed over the territory.

    "They make similar statements now and again, while they understand that
    the situation is totally different. They are seeking to calm internal
    anxiety with such senseless and absurd statements," Azerbaijani
    Defence Ministry spokesman Eldar Sabiroglu told an APA correspondent.

    Serious shortcomings in Armenia itself and the military units in
    the occupied lands have caused great public anxiety and the Armenian
    government and military leadership are also concerned, Sabiroglu said.

    "If you look at news sources in Armenia, you can see the proof of
    my words there. They are very anxious. They fear the development
    of the Azerbaijani army and the new weapons it has obtained. They
    have lost their peace of mind at the annual growth in Azerbaijan's
    military expenditure, ordered by Supreme Commander-in-Chief Ilham
    Aliyev. This is the reason behind their senseless statements. Not only
    we, but also other states and influential international organizations
    acknowledge this."

    His remarks come after unrecognized Karabakh's defence minister, Movses
    Hakobyan, told a press conference on 12 August that the Azerbaijani
    army would suffer another defeat if it attempted to end the conflict
    by force.

    "In my view, if Azerbaijan thinks that it can solve the Artsakh
    [Karabakh] problem by military means, the resumption of hostilities
    will be possible," Radio Liberty's Armenian Service reported Hakobyan
    as saying.

    The Azerbaijani Defence Ministry spokesman countered that a recent
    report by a UK think-tank showed that the Azerbaijani army was ahead
    of the Armenian armed forces in all parameters. "Given the battle
    capability of the personnel, in the event of a new war Azerbaijan's
    victory over Armenia in a short period of time is inevitable,"
    Sabiroglu said.

    Movses Hakobyan said last week that the Karabakh army's potential
    had increased 20% since the introduction of a reform program in 2010.

    "The program will be continuous and we will not allow the Azerbaijani
    army to leave us behind in the issue of arms," Hakobyan said, according
    to International Public Radio of Armenia.

    He said that the Karabakh armed forces had acquired significant amounts
    of new weapons this year and would continue the military buildup in
    the months to come.

    "During this period, the qualitative and quantitative state of our
    weapons and military hardware changed quite a lot," Hakobyan told
    the news conference. "Quite serious reforms were carried out with
    the restructuring of two army brigades.

    "We re-armed one artillery regiment with new systems. The anti-tank
    and air-defence means of a dozen battalions were enhanced. And this
    year we will receive more tanks - two more divisions - and some of
    the weaponry of the army's air-defence system will be replaced."

    Hakobyan, who commanded some Karabakh Armenian units during the
    1991-1994 war with Azerbaijan, gave no other details of the buildup,
    Radio Liberty's Armenian Service commented.

    Armenia, whose armed forces are closely connected with the Karabakh
    military, is likely to be the main source of the arms acquisitions
    reported by him.

    Claims and counter-claims of a victory in a renewed war for Karabakh
    are made by both sides from time to time.

    The conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh began in 1988 when Armenia made
    claims on the Azerbaijani territory. Armenian armed forces later
    occupied a swathe of Azerbaijani territory in a bitter war, including
    the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts. Despite
    a ceasefire in 1994, no long-term peace agreement has been reached.

    The nub of the conflict remains unresolved - the competing claims of
    territorial integrity, which Azerbaijan insists takes precedence in
    the case of Karabakh, and self-determination, which Armenia wants to
    see for the Armenians of Karabakh.




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X