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Russian-Georgian Spy Scandal 'Irrelevant To Armenia'

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  • Russian-Georgian Spy Scandal 'Irrelevant To Armenia'

    RUSSIAN-GEORGIAN SPY SCANDAL 'IRRELEVANT TO ARMENIA'
    By Emil Danielyan and Hovannes Shoghikian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Sept 28 2006

    Armenia distanced itself Thursday from the latest upsurge in
    Russian-Georgian tensions that has been triggered by the arrest of a
    group of Russian military officers for alleged spying which Georgia
    says was coordinated by Russian intelligence agents in Yerevan.

    Georgian authorities said on Wednesday that they detained four GRU
    (Russian military intelligence) officers as well as 11 Georgian
    citizens suspected of involvement in an alleged Russian plot against
    the pro-Western government in Tbilisi. Georgian Interior Minister
    Vano Merabishvili said they "acted under the leadership from Yerevan"
    of a top GRU officer whom he identified as Anatoly Sinitsyn.

    Moscow angrily rejected the accusations, demanding an immediate release
    of its citizens. Reuters reported that Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov
    denounced as a "complete outrage" Georgia's action which he said had
    also included the beating of a Russian officer and six soldiers in
    a separate incident in the Black Sea port of Batumi.

    Officials in Yerevan insisted that Armenia, Russia's main regional
    ally, bears no responsibility for the acrimonious scandal. "We have
    nothing to do with that," the Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman,
    Vladimir Karapetian, told RFE/RL.

    Colonel-General Mikael, the Armenian chief of staff, echoed the
    statement, urging journalists not to "jump into conclusions." He also
    dismissed as irrelevant the fact that four of the arrested Georgian
    nationals are reportedly ethnic Armenians.

    "They are citizens of Georgia, and I think authorities in Georgia
    will clear things up," said Harutiunian. "I think we will be able to
    say something concrete about this issue after finally understanding
    what the matter is. It is too premature to comment now."

    Asked about the Georgian claims that the alleged Russian espionage
    was guided from Armenian territory, Harutiunian replied: "They can
    say anything. What they say is their business. But there has to
    be evidence."

    Other Armenian officials argued that Yerevan has no control over the
    happenings inside Russia's diplomatic missions and military base in
    Armenia. None of the diplomats at Russian embassy in Yerevan that
    bears the name Anatoly Sinitsyn, an embassy spokeswoman told RFE/RL.

    Merabishvili would not say if Tbilisi will raise the issue with
    Yerevan, and the Georgian embassy in Armenia declined a comment.

    According to Karapetian, the Armenian government has received no
    diplomatic notes or other messages from the Georgian side in connection
    with the affair.
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