Anatoly Serdyukov to inspect the Gabala radar station

DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
November 30, 2007 Friday

RADAR STATION AVAILABLE;
Anatoly Serdyukov to inspect the Gabala radar station

by Sokhbet Mamedov

DEFENSE COOPERATION BETWEEN RUSSIA AND AZERBAIJAN; Defense Minister
Anatoly Serdyukov is starting his first visit to Azerbaijan today.
The Russian and Azeri defense ministers will hold official talks,
discussing military cooperation development and the prospects for
using the Gabala radar station.

Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov is starting a working visit to
Baku today. Azeri Defense Ministry spokesman Eldar Sabiroglu told us
that the Russian and Azeri defense ministers will hold official
talks, discussing military cooperation development and the prospects
for using the Gabala radar station.

This is Serdyukov’s first visit to Azerbaijan. He arrived in Baku on
the evening of Tuesday, November 27, flying in from Astana, where he
had attended a meeting of the CIS Defense Ministers’ Council.

Relations between the defense ministries of Russia and Azerbaijan are
based on the principles of mutual benefit; their contacts are regular
and productive. All the same, the defense ministers have much to
discuss when they meet in person. For example, the Azeri government
has expressed concern about transfers of Russian military hardware
>From Georgia to the 102nd Russian military base in the town of
Giumri, Armenia. The Azeri government believes that in the event of
hostilities being resumed, this hardware could be used by Armenia
against Azerbaijan. The Azeri government has also alleged that
Russia, co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group on Armenian-Azeri conflict
regulation, is effectively helping to strengthen the military forces
of Armenia – and Azeri President Ilham Aliyev has stated repeatedly
that Armenia is occupying almost 20% of Azerbaijan’s territory.
According to Azeri Defense Minister Safar Abiyev, these circumstances
pose a real threat to regional stability and could lead to a
resumption of hostilities at any moment. While visiting Astana the
previous day, Abiyev told journalists that armed conflict between
Armenia and Azerbaijan is "quite likely."

An equally important topic of discussion for the two ministers will
be the fate of the Gabala radar station. Vasili Istratov, Russian
Ambassador in Azerbaijan, commented on this as follows: "We believe
that the radar in Gabala can perform all tasks related to identifying
actual or potential threats. We also understand that the Americans
have not entirely rejected the possibility of using this radar. We
shall wait until the Americans respond to our proposal for shared use
of the Gabala radar." Istratov went on to say: "In any event,
decisions on using the Gabala radar can only be made after
preliminary consultations with Azerbaijan."

The Gabala radar station, located near the town of Zaragan in the
Gabala district of Azerbaijan, has been operating since 1985 and is
designed to detect ICBM launches in the Southern hemisphere. It
monitors the territories of Iran, Turkey, China, Pakistan, India,
Iraq, Australia, most of Africa, and islands in the Indian and
Atlantic oceans. A bilateral agreement signed in January 2002 gives
the Darial radar at Gabala the status of an information-analysis
center, owned by Azerbaijan and used by Russia under a ten-year
lease.

Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, November 28, 2007, p. 7

Translated by Elena Leonova