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Nagorno-Karabagh: Military Balance Between Armenia & Azerbaijan

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  • Re: Nagorno-Karabagh: Military Balance Between Armenia & Azerbaijan

    Բեռնափոխադրման համար ոչ պիտանի 400 կոնտեյներ կփոխանցվի ՊՆ-ին

    «Ապավեն» բեռնափոխադրումների ընկերության տարածքում առկա մոտ 400 ժամկետանց կոնտեյներներ կփոխանցվեն ՀՀ պաշտպանության նախարարությանը՝ երկրի պաշտպանական կարիքների համար օգտագործելու նպատակով:


    Համապատասխան պայմանավորվածությունը ձեռք է բերվել ՀՀ տրանսպորտի, կապի եւ տեղեկատվական տեխնոլոգիաների նախարար Վահան Մարտիրոսյանի եւ նախարարի առաջին տեղակալ Արթուր Առաքելյանի՝ «Ապավեն» ընկերություն այցելության ընթացքում:

    Նախարարության մամուլի ծառայության փոխանցմամբ՝ տեւական ժամանակ է, ինչ ընկերության տարածքում առկա են ժամկետանց կոնտեյներներ, որոնք արդի տեխնոլոգիաների պայմաններում այլեւս շահագործման ենթակա չեն: Այդ գույքը դատարանի որոշմամբ ավելի վաղ ճանաչվել էր տիրազուրկ:

    «Տեղափոխման հետ կապված կազմակերպչական հարցերը լուծելուց եւ ՀՀ պաշտպանության նախարարությանը հանձնելուց հետո բեռնափոխադրման համար ոչ պիտանի կոնտեյներները կծառայեն ոչ իրենց նշանակությամբ, սակայն անհրաժեշտ նպատակի»,- ասված է հաղորդագրությունում:

    «Ապավեն»-ը Հայաստանում գործում է ավելի քան 20 տարի, արտասահմանում ունի գրասենյակների ցանց: Հայաստանից արտերկիր եւ հակառակ ուղղությամբ տարեկան փոխադրում է 10 հազ. կոնտեյներ:

    Comment


    • Re: Nagorno-Karabagh: Military Balance Between Armenia & Azerbaijan

      Հունվարի 22-ին թշնամու կրակոցից զոհվել է ՊԲ զինծառայող

      Comment


      • Re: Nagorno-Karabagh: Military Balance Between Armenia & Azerbaijan

        Originally posted by Spetsnaz View Post
        Հունվարի 22-ին թշնամու կրակոցից զոհվել է ՊԲ զինծառայող

        http://razm.info/95171
        How come it does not say where this happened?
        Hayastan or Bust.

        Comment


        • Re: Nagorno-Karabagh: Military Balance Between Armenia & Azerbaijan

          Oh Yeah...

          Purges Have Weakened Once Mighty Turkish Military

          January 18, 2017

          Mass firings after last summer's failed coup attempt have created widespread anxiety inside the Turkish military. A weakened army and the loss of high-ranking officers is becoming a problem for NATO.

          Comment


          • Re: Nagorno-Karabagh: Military Balance Between Armenia & Azerbaijan

            Killed Nagorno-Karabakh sergeant fatally shot by fellow serviceman

            17:45 • 23.01.17

            A probe into the recent fatality in a Nagorno-Karabakh defense unit has revealed new details over the contract serviceman’s death.

            An investigation launched by the Yerevan Garrison Investigative Department found that Sergeant Arayik Sargsyan was fatally wounded by a fellow serviceman.

            He was shot in the abdomen in a south-eastern defense unit last Monday afternoon.

            A criminal case has been instituted.

            The inquest is under way.
            An investigation launched by the Yerevan Garrison Investigative Department found that Sergeant Arayik Sargsyan was fatally wounded ...
            Hayastan or Bust.

            Comment


            • Re: Nagorno-Karabagh: Military Balance Between Armenia & Azerbaijan

              Originally posted by Haykakan View Post
              Killed Nagorno-Karabakh sergeant fatally shot by fellow serviceman

              17:45 • 23.01.17

              A probe into the recent fatality in a Nagorno-Karabakh defense unit has revealed new details over the contract serviceman’s death.

              An investigation launched by the Yerevan Garrison Investigative Department found that Sergeant Arayik Sargsyan was fatally wounded by a fellow serviceman.

              He was shot in the abdomen in a south-eastern defense unit last Monday afternoon.

              A criminal case has been instituted.

              The inquest is under way.
              http://www.tert.am/en/news/2017/01/2...rgsyan/2256908
              So if it's not our enemy it's us. They should really start introducing classes to stop this violence introducing empathy , sympathy , punishment and the rest. This is getting out of hand.

              Comment


              • Re: Nagorno-Karabagh: Military Balance Between Armenia & Azerbaijan

                Comment


                • Re: Nagorno-Karabagh: Military Balance Between Armenia & Azerbaijan

                  Comment


                  • Re: Nagorno-Karabagh: Military Balance Between Armenia & Azerbaijan

                    Այս գիշեր Ադրբեջանի զինուժը ինտենսիվ կրակ է բացել. Հայկական կողմը պատասխանել է. ԼՂՀ ՊԲ
                    10:14, 23.01.2017
                    Տարածաշրջան:Հայաստան, Արցախ, Ադրբեջան
                    Թեմա: Քաղաքականություն


                    Հունվարի 22-ին եւ լույս 23-ի գիշերը ղարաբաղա-ադրբեջանական հակամարտ զորքերի շփման գծում հակառակորդը հիմնականում տարբեր տրամաչափի հրաձգային զինատեսակներից, հրադադարի պահպանման ռեժիմը խախտել է ավելի քան 55 անգամ՝ հայ դիրքապահների ուղղությամբ արձակելով շուրջ 430 կրակոց:
                    ԼՂՀ ՊԲ-ից NEWS.am-ին հայտնում են, որ շփման գծի արեւելյան ուղղությամբ ադրբեջանական զինուժը առավել ինտենսիվ կրակ է վարել դիպուկահար հրացաններից (92 կրակոց), ինչպես նաեւ կիրառել է 82 միլիմետրանոց ականանետ (2 արկ):

                    ՊԲ առաջապահ զորամասերը հակառակորդի նախահարձակ ակտիվությունը ճնշելու համար դիմել են պատասխան գործողությունների եւ շարունակել իրականացնել իրենց առջեւ դրված մարտական խնդիրը:
                    Ավելի վաղ NEWS.am-ը հայտնել էր, որ հակառակորդի կողմից հրադադարի ռեժիմի խախտման արդյունքում՝ հունվարի 22-ին՝ ժամը 23:25-ի սահմաններում, ՊԲ արեւելյան ուղղությամբ տեղակայված զորամասերից մեկի պահպանության տեղամասում, մահացու վիրավորում է ստացել պայմանագրային զինծառայող, 1995թ. ծնված Կարեն Մարատի Ուլուբաբյանը:
                    Դեպքի մանրամասները պարզելու համար կատարվում է քննություն:
                    Լուրեր Հայաստանից - NEWS.am
                    Hayastan or Bust.

                    Comment


                    • Re: Nagorno-Karabagh: Military Balance Between Armenia & Azerbaijan

                      The Threat of a Karabakh Conflict in 2017

                      Posted by: THOMAS DE WAAL
                      TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 2017

                      Every year, as the spring thaw is awaited in the mountains of Armenia and Azerbaijan, the small coterie of scholars and experts who keep an eye on the Nagorny Karabakh conflict ask, “Will there be war?” This year, Karabakh watchers are especially gloomy. Twenty-sixteen was a bad year, and 2017 could yet be worse.

                      Over four days last April, up to 200 Armenians and Azerbaijanis died in the worst fighting since 1994 across the so-called line of contact that divides their two armies east of the disputed territory of Nagorny Karabakh and cuts across Azerbaijani territory that the Armenians captured as they secured a victory in the conflict of the 1990s.

                      The violence precipitated a flurry of diplomatic activity over the summer. The Azerbaijanis tentatively agreed to measures to strengthen the 1994 ceasefire regime, and the Armenians assented to a more comprehensive negotiating process. But in the last six months, the deals provisionally concluded in the summer have slowly unraveled. The Karabakh situation has defaulted to a familiar and depressing mix of mutual accusations of bad faith, Azerbaijani frustration, Armenian inertia, and diplomatic wrestling over tiny details.

                      Of course, as U.S. Founding Father Benjamin Franklin said, a bad peace is better than a good war. A new conflict in the Caucasus could lead to thousands of casualties and economic devastation—without resolving the core issues of the dispute. But there is a danger that the parties could miscalculate and end up fighting anyway, despite their better judgment.

                      The arrangements made in 1994–1995 after the ceasefire was signed look less and less sustainable: no peacekeepers, a tiny Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe monitoring mission with a limited mandate, and a process that has managed the situation but not resolved it. In 1994, the 250-kilometer (155-mile) line of contact was a string of hastily dug trenches separating the two armies, across which conscript soldiers took occasionally potshots—and sometimes met to chat and exchange cigarettes. Now, it is the most militarized zone in Europe, bristling with artillery, long-range missile launchers, attack helicopters, and military drones. Azerbaijan has spent billions of dollars of oil revenues on new weaponry. The Armenians have spent less but maintained a credible defensive capability, thanks to buying Russian weapons at discounted prices.

                      In the four-day war in April 2016, the Azerbaijani side recaptured two small pockets of territory. The psychological boost the Azerbaijanis received was far bigger. The perception of a successful military offensive helped reverse two-decades-old feelings of humiliation, and an upsurge of patriotism helped distract the Azerbaijani population from a shrinking economy and falling currency.

                      Now that the latest diplomatic initiative, spearheaded by Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, has stalled, there is a temptation for Baku to retry what might be called military leverage—to launch another operation to recapture territory and put pressure on the Armenian side.

                      The risk is that a small operation would inevitably escalate into something even more serious than last time. The Azerbaijani authorities would be under pressure to capture substantial amounts of territory, rather than the small slivers they took last time. The Armenians would be under pressure from their public to fight more strongly than they did last April and reverse any gains made by the other side.

                      Both sides almost certainly overestimate their military prowess. Both also have newly acquired deadly weaponry. The Armenians have obtained Iskander missiles from Russia that they exhibited at an Independence Day parade in September 2016. The weapons have a range of 280 kilometers (174 miles) and could be targeted at urban centers or oil and gas infrastructure in Azerbaijan. This would be a desperate option, but possible if a larger-scale Azerbaijani were launched. Such a move would also be in line with Armenia’s 2015 military strategy, which permits preemptive action in the name of deterrence. The Azerbaijanis have made big weapons purchases from Israel, including an Iron Dome missile-defense system and military drones.

                      If the military context is dangerous, the political one is no better. Azerbaijan’s oil boom has ended and the economy has declined further over the last year, shrinking by around 4 percent in 2016, with the manat having lost 57 percent of its value since January 2015.

                      In Armenia, President Serzh Sargsyan faces a tricky parliamentary election on April 2. When the vote is completed, his country is due to make the transition to a new constitution in which executive power switches from the president to the parliament. This is widely perceived as a gambit by Sargsyan, whose second and last presidential term ends in 2018, to find a way of shoring up his own power. The switch is controversial and the opposition will use the election to challenge him in all ways possible.

                      A final factor of instability is international turbulence—the election of Donald Trump as U.S. president, ongoing crises in the EU—which is being felt in the South Caucasus and could encourage the parties to behave more irresponsibly and believe they can get away with more.

                      If there is fighting, it will be hard to manage. In April 2016, Moscow negotiated a verbal ceasefire between the parties. But it is a misconception that Moscow is pulling the strings in the Karabakh conflict. Moscow has never been in control since the dispute broke out in 1988, having tried variously to back one side or the other or to mediate. Currently, Russia is highly distrusted in both countries and neither Baku nor Yerevan will allow it to impose its own agenda on their number one national issue.

                      In short, the threat of preemptive violence over Karabakh needs to be met with intense preemptive diplomacy. A descent into new conflict in the South Caucasus is the last thing anyone wants—least of all the ordinary Armenians and Azerbaijanis who will be caught in the middle of it.

                      Comment

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