
ArmInfo. Armenia's membership in the CSTO has allowed the country to procure weapons at below-market rates, as stated by Robert Kocharyan, the second president of Armenia and the prime ministerial candidate from the Armenia bloc, in an interview with Armenia TV.
"I do not consider it wise to give this up. Furthermore, need to understand that Russia is the key CSTO country. Yes, there are issues, but they do not lie solely within the dimension that the Armenian side focuses on," the former President of Armenia stated.
In this vein, he reiterated that most CSTO members, with the exception of Russia, have better relations with Azerbaijan than with Armenia. According to him, Yerevan should reflect on the underlying reasons for this rather than placing the blame on others.
"We must build our relations with Russia. Kyrgyzstan has no interests here. I'm somewhat disappointed with the CSTO myself, but the situation must be viewed from a practical standpoint. We have bilateral agreements with the Russian Federation, yet the Armenian authorities are doing nothing to activate them. While I do not pin high hopes on the CSTO, leaving it would be akin to shooting ourselves in the foot," Kocharyan noted, adding that purchasing untested Indian weaponry is not the best course of action.
Kocharyan pointed out that procurement from multiple different countries is fraught with technical challenges, noting that in modern warfare, only seconds pass between a reconnaissance drone signal and the activation of a fire control system. "Indian, French, Iranian, and Russian armaments all run on different software. This diversity severely hinders the development of an integrated command and control system," Kocharyan stated.
Recall, Armenia has been boycotting events within the framework of the CSTO since late 2022. In February 2024, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated that Armenia had practically frozen its participation in the CSTO because the Organization failed to fulfill its obligations toward the Republic of Armenia, an issue that could not be left without consequences. Later, on September 18, 2024, speaking at the Second Pan Armenian Summit, Pashinyan asserted that the CSTO poses threats to Armenia's security, its future existence, sovereignty, and statehood.