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  • Moscow signals it may redeploy some forces from Georgia to Armenia

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    May 24 2005


    MOSCOW SIGNALS IT MAY REDEPLOY SOME FORCES FROM GEORGIA TO ARMENIA

    Tuesday, May 24, 2005

    Russian General Baluyevsky said that heavy weaponry in Georgia would
    be redeployed in Armenia. Meeting with the staff of Komsomolskaya
    pravda on May 23, Russian President Vladimir Putin said, with
    reference to the possible closure of Russian bases in Georgia: "We
    must create the necessary conditions for the evacuation of our troop
    contingent, its accommodation on Russian territory or in some other
    place." He apparently meant the possible relocation of some of those
    troops to Armenia. One of Russia's conditions for closing its bases
    in Georgia, Putin went on to say, is transit rights for Russian
    forces via Georgia to Armenia (Interfax, May 23).

    Four days earlier, the Chief of the General Staff of Russia's armed
    forces, General Yuri Baluyevsky, told the press in Moscow that some
    of the heavy weaponry from Russian bases in Georgia would be
    redeployed with Russian forces in Armenia, if Georgia insists that
    Russia close those bases by 2009 (Georgia actually insists on 2008).
    Baluyevsky indicated that Moscow could forgo the redeployment of
    combat hardware to Armenia, if Georgia would agree to a 10-year term
    for Russian troop withdrawal. In that case, he suggested, there would
    be sufficient time and funding for accommodating the troops and
    storing the weaponry under proper conditions in Russia (Interfax,
    RIA-Novosti, May 19).

    In a little-noted move on May 21, Armenia's Defense Minister Serge
    Sarkisian met with Russia's Minister for Territorial Development
    Vladimir Yakovlev in Yerevan for a session of the CIS
    Inter-Ministerial Commission for Cooperation in Building Activities.
    Yakovlev, whose ministry is in charge of construction projects,
    discussed with Sarkisian the resumption of unfinished construction
    work at the Russian military base in Gyumry, Armenia (PanArmenian
    News, May 21). This move seems to confirm Moscow's intention to
    prepare for relocating part of its force from Georgia to Armenia, if
    a troop-withdrawal agreement with Georgia is signed.

    Moscow's apparent intention is disturbing to Azerbaijan. In an
    initial public reaction, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Araz
    Azimov recalled previous transfers of Russian arms to Armenia, noting
    that yet another increase in those arsenals could fuel regional
    instability. "We are seriously concerned about this, and would not
    want Russia to do this again," Azimov stated during a NATO seminar in
    Baku. A communique from Azerbaijan's Defense Ministry, citing
    Baluyevsky's remarks, "condemn[ed] such steps," and noted that Russia
    would be arming a country that is at war with Azerbaijan (ANS, Turan,
    May 20).

    On May 23, Azerbaijan's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Elmar
    Mamedyarov, summoned Russia's chargé d'affaires ad interim to hand
    him a verbal note that the ministry made public. Expressing serious
    concern over possible redeployment of Russian arsenals from bases in
    Georgia to Armenia, the document notes, "Such a turn of events would
    run counter to the interests of peace and security in the region and,
    moreover, increase tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan during a
    complicated phase of conflict-settlement negotiations." Azerbaijan
    "hopes that Russia would desist from that intention" (Turan, May 23).


    Armenia's authorities are not known to have reacted one way or
    another to Moscow's declared intention. Nor have Putin, Baluyevsky,
    or others deemed it necessary to say that they had asked for and
    received Armenia's consent to the possible redeployment. The
    assumption all around appears to be, first, that Russia can use
    Armenia's territory for military purposes at will; and, second, that
    Armenia would welcome another infusion of Russian combat hardware on
    its territory.

    Quoting Russian Duma Chairman Boris Gryzlov's notorious
    characterization of Armenia as "Russia's outpost," a leading Yerevan
    liberal newspaper observes, "Russia is doing to Armenia, in this case
    on Armenian territory, what it likes. Nobody from the Armenian elite
    says anything. ... Putting Armenian territory at Russia's disposal is
    the price that Armenian authorities have to pay for the Kremlin's
    support" (Aravot, May 20).

    According to the latest issue of The Military Balance, Russia
    currently maintains 3,500 troops, 74 main battle tanks, 238 armored
    combat vehicles and personnel carriers, 84 artillery systems, and 18
    Mig-29 aircraft in Armenia (International Institute for Strategic
    Studies, 2005.) Armenia has yielded part of its own entitlement quota
    of CFE Treaty-limited heavy weaponry to Russia for deployment on
    Armenian territory. However, verification of compliance with treaty
    ceilings is impossible because a large part of that weaponry is
    deployed inside territory seized from Azerbaijan, uncounted and out
    of bounds to inspection.
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