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Baku Says Russian Arms Trade At $4 Billion

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  • Baku Says Russian Arms Trade At $4 Billion

    BAKU SAYS RUSSIAN ARMS TRADE AT $4 BILLION

    http://asbarez.com/112796/baku-says-russian-arms-trade-at-4-billion/
    Tuesday, August 13th, 2013

    Russian President Vladimir Putin and Azeri President Ilham Aliyev at
    a recent meeting in Baku

    BAKU (Combined Sources)-Azerbaijan said its arms trade with Russia
    is worth $4 billion as it boosted military spending in connection
    with the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, reported Bloomberg.

    "As of today, military and technical cooperation with Russia is
    measured at $4 billion and it tends to grow further," Azeri President
    Ilham Aliyev said Tuesday after meeting with Russian President Vladimir
    Putin in Baku. It was the first time Azerbaijan disclosed the price
    of its arms deals.

    Azerbaijan has increased military spending by almost 30 times to $3.7
    billion in the past decade and repeatedly threatened to use force to
    regain control of Karabakh if peace talks fail.

    At a press conference following their meeting, Putin said only a
    diplomatic solution would be acceptable for the Karabakh conflict.

    "There is only a political solution to Karabakh conflict," the RIA
    Novosti agency quoted Putin as saying.

    "During the negotiations we touched upon international issues,
    including the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. Russia is providing active
    assistance to the settlement, which is possible only by political
    means," added Putin.

    He also stressed the need for a resolution of the existing problems
    in the Caspian region related to delimitation, ecological issues,
    for the benefit of all countries of the region.

    But, Putin failed to clinch a concrete energy deal on his rare trip
    to Azerbaijan on Tuesday, dashing Moscow's hopes to challenge the
    dominance of major Western energy companies in the former Soviet
    republic, reported Reuters.

    Putin's trips abroad usually yield a flurry of deals and one of his
    closest allies, state oil champion Rosneft's head Igor Sechin, went
    to Baku last month to prepare the ground.

    Russia has long tried to increase its presence in Azerbaijan, a country
    Europe is hoping will help it lessen its dependence on Russian gas
    after Moscow's "gas wars" with Ukraine disrupted deliveries in 2006
    and 2009.

    But on Tuesday, Sechin signed only a vague cooperation agreement with
    Azeri state energy firm Socar as Putin landed in Baku for the first
    time in seven years.

    "Under this agreement, we plan to cooperate on a number of issues
    including crude swap operations, a joint use of infrastructure,"
    Sechin told reporters without giving details.

    Sources on both sides said a lot of differences needed to be removed
    for the companies to agree on teaming up on field development or
    swapping energy supplies.

    "Azerbaijan is asking such a high price for its assets that Rosneft
    is not willing to offer," a Russian energy source said, asking not
    to be named. A Socar source also said a lot of work needed to be done
    to iron out the differences.

    Western oil companies such as BP, Statoil and Exxon Mobil have
    dominated the Azeri oil industry since the collapse of the Soviet
    Union while relations between Moscow and Baku have been mostly cool.

    Ties between Moscow and Baku were strained late last year after
    protracted talks between the two countries failed to reach a deal
    over Moscow's use of a radar station on Azeri territory.

    The only Russian company with a significant presence in Azerbaijan
    is the privately-held Lukoil.

    Russian state gas monopoly Gazprom agreed in the last decade to buy
    almost the entire gas output from Azerbaijan, in what was seen as
    a successful attempt by Russia to defend its leading position in
    Europe's gas markets.

    But the deal never materialized in full, and Azerbaijan and major oil
    companies have instead agreed to supply most of their gas through a
    new pipeline to Europe from 2019.

    The project does not represent a major challenge to Russia's gas
    dominance in Europe, although Moscow has always been keen to make
    sure Azerbaijan does not become a major transit route for gas from
    other Caspian Sea producers.

    The threat has somewhat diminished since major producer Turkmenistan
    rerouted most of its gas to China away from Russia and the European
    markets.

    Azerbaijan has almost a trillion cubic meters in gas reserves,
    according to BP data, relatively small compared to Russia's 33 trillion
    cubic meters.

    Last month, industry sources told Reuters Rosneft was seeking a stake
    in Azerbaijan's Absheron gas project but this was not mentioned in
    the cooperation agreement.

    SOCAR and French oil company Total each hold 40 percent in Absheron
    with the remainder being held by GDF Suez. Azeri officials have said
    Absheron will help increase Azeri gas exports in coming years.

    Sources have also said Rosneft and Socar were also considering swapping
    Azeri oil in Europe against Russian supplies to Asia which would allow
    Rosneft to service its plants in Italy and Germany while Socar would
    supply its Asian buyers.

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