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![]() by AFP Staff Writers Yerevan (AFP) April 14, 2021
Armenia said Wednesday it will seek to expand the presence of Russian troops on its soil in a move that would further strengthen Moscow's role as the tiny Caucasus country's security guarantor. Russia helped broker a peace deal between Armenia and its arch-foe Azerbaijan in November which ended six weeks of fighting over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region that claimed the lives of some 6,000 people. Under the deal, Armenia ceded swathes of territories to Azerbaijan in the disputed enclave as well as surrounding areas it had controlled since a war in 1990s, as well as allowing the deployment of Russian peacekeepers in the area. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said Wednesday that his government was in "talks with Russian partners on setting up a foothold of Russia's 102nd military base" in Armenia's Syunik region that borders Azerbaijan and Iran. "The Armenian-Russian military alliance is pivotal for ensuring Armenia's security," he said in parliament, stressing the "critical importance" of the "joint Russian-Armenian military alignment and of the joint air defense system." "We are discussing the possibility of expanding the capabilities of Russia's military base." Armenia is part of the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organisation, a military alliance that also includes Belarus and three ex-Soviet republics in Central Asia. Under the treaty, Russia has an obligation to defend Armenia in the event that the small landlocked nation comes under attack from a foreign power. Armenia hosts a 3,000-troops-strong Russian military base in its second-largest city of Gyumri and Russian border guards are deployed along Armenia's borders with Azerbaijan, Turkey and Iran. Armenia and Turkey have been at loggerheads since Armenia gained independence following the Soviet Union's dissolution in 1991 and their shared border has remained closed ever since. Turkey's backing of Turkic-speaking Azerbaijan in its conflict with Armenia over Karabakh -- and Armenia's bid to get WWI-era massacres of ethnic Armenians in the Ottoman Empire recognised as genocide -- have soured relations between the two countries.
Turkish soldier killed by rocket fire in Iraq "One of our heroic brothers was killed in the attack" on the Turkish base at Bashiqa outside the city of Mosul, the ministry said, adding that three rockets had been fired but only one reached its target. An Iraqi child was injured when another of the rockets landed in a nearby village. The Turkish army deployed a drone to survey the area. Turkey has maintained a military presence around Bashiqa, much to the annoyance of Baghdad as it is not within the autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) area. Shortly before the Bashiqa attack, some tens of kilometres away, a drone attack targeted the airport of Arbil, capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, where US troops are based. It was not immediately clear who carried out the two attacks.
![]() ![]() NATO ministers to hold talks as US announces Afghan withdrawal Brussels (AFP) April 13, 2021 NATO defence and foreign ministers will hold a video conference Wednesday after the US said it was planning to withdraw troops from Afghanistan by September 11 this year. The alliance announced the jumbo meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin attending in person after talks with NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg. A US official said on Tuesday that President Joe Biden had reached the conclusion to end Washington's two-decade involvement in Afghanistan by l ... read more
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