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Russia To Double Troops In Armenia

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  • Russia To Double Troops In Armenia

    RUSSIA TO DOUBLE TROOPS IN ARMENIA

    EurasiaNet.org
    June 20 2012
    NY

    Following a pick-up in fatal gunfire exchanges along the
    Nagorno-Karabakh frontline, Moscow has announced plans to double its
    troop strength in ally Armenia by the end of the year. The upshot
    of the message was clear: Azerbaijan could face Russian guns if it
    attempts to push Armenian forces out of long-occupied Azerbaijani
    lands.

    The new arrivals will be temporary -- the "permanent" troop presence
    at Gyumri, the northern Armenian site of Russia's 102nd Military Base,
    will stay at 5,000, according to Colonel Igor Gorbul, a spokesperson
    for Russia's Southern Military District, RIA Novosti reported --
    and will receive a higher salary and undefined benefits to whet their
    interest in sticking around.

    They'll arrive at a base that's been a bit on the bustling side of
    late. Russian jets have been busy drilling in Armenian airspace, and,
    in March, Moscow held war games in Gyumri. Earlier on, the head of
    the Collective Security Treaty Organization -- a Russian response to
    NATO -- said that the Moscow-led alliance will protect Armenia from
    enemy attacks. "If unfriendly actions are taken against Armenia,
    all member states will provide relevant assistance to Armenia,"
    pledged CSTO Secretary-General Nikolai Bordyuzha.

    Officials in Baku countered that not all CSTO members would be willing
    to take on Azerbaijan. "The CSTO and Russia, in particular, should
    not help the occupant [Armenia], if Azerbaijan decides to free its
    lands," said Faraj Guliyev, a member of the Azerbaijani parliament's
    Committee for Defense and Security.

    But as the 2008 war with Georgia showed, if Russia wants to get
    involved, it will -- and the results can be disastrous.

    As is its wont in the South Caucasus' separatist struggles, Moscow,
    though, wears two hats in the 24-year-long Nagorno-Karabakh conflict --
    that of Armenia's longtime military ally and that of mediator (along
    with the US and France) between Armenia and Azerbaijan. While, like
    its fellow go-betweens, it espouses belief in a peaceful resolution,
    its buildup in Armenia suggests another belief as well -- speak softly,
    but carry a big stick.

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