NATO Conference in Baku
Published:
23 June 2004 y., Wednesday
Two senior officials from the Armenian Defense Ministry were due to arrive in Baku late Monday in their second attempt to participate in a NATO conference there which is seen as an affront to Azerbaijan by local nationalist groups.
Defense Ministry spokesman Seyran Shahsuvarian told RFE/RL that the two army officers boarded a Baku-bound plane in Tbilisi after being formally allowed to enter the country by the Azerbaijani embassy in Georgia’s capital. The Armenian mission in Tbilisi confirmed that they were issued on June 11 with a special “written permission” to attend the conference which will discuss preparations for a military exercise to be held in Azerbaijan in September under NATO’s Partnership for Peace (PfP) program.
Armenia has repeatedly stated its intention to take part in the exercise and, under the PfP rules, does not need Azerbaijan’s consent for doing that. It failed to send representatives to NATO’s first planning conference in Baku last January, accusing the Azerbaijani side of blocking their arrival via Istanbul.
Yerevan’s resolve to join the multinational war games in its arch-foe’s territory appears to have been unaffected by the brutal killing in Budapest on February 19 of an Armenian army officer by an Azerbaijani colleague. The two young lieutenants were attending a NATO-sponsored course at Hungary’s top military academy. The Armenian military has since pledged to pay greater attention to the security of its officers who come into contact with Azerbaijani servicemen as part of international exchange programs.
“I am ready to go there even if they kill me,” Colonel Murad Isakhanian, one of the two Armenian officers due to attend the NATO seminar, told RFE/RL from Tbilisi shortly before flying to Baku. “I am a military officer and must obey orders,” he added.
According to Shahsuvarian, responsibility for ensuring their security primarily lies with NATO.
Šaltinis:
RFE/RL
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Latvia's next ambassador to the United States may be Māris Riekstiņš, replacing Aivis Ronis, whose tour of duty ends this year
more »
Gerhard Schröder's ruling Social Democrats have bowed to public pressure and announced plans to scrap Germany's 54-year-old ban on national plebiscites
more »
Turkey could open European Union entry talks as early as next April should the EU decide that the country is up to the EU's economic and democratic standards
more »
All EU member states have to share the burden of securing the bloc's external borders, according to the incoming European Commissioner for Justice and Home Affairs
more »
The president of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev met with the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Japan Yoriko Kawaguchi in the capital of Kazakhstan, Astana
more »
Iranian President Mohammad Khatami plans to visit Belarus in September 9-10
more »
Belorusian KGB investigators have charged opposition politician with stealing office equipment from the Business Initiative think tank
more »
Europe's newest and youngest prime minister, Stanislav Gross, 34, now leads his coalition with a one seat majority in the lower house of parliament
more »
Japan's House of Representatives Speaker Yohei Kono suggested Tuesday that Japan should maintain its war-renouncing Constitution rather than revising it in order to try and gain a permanent seat of the UN Security Council
more »
Rumsfeld in Russia: Differences persist between the two countries
more »