
ArmInfo. The volume of work in the defense sector carried out this year will continue next year. This was stated by Deputy Minister of Defense of the Republic of Armenia Hrachya Sargsyan on September 5 in an interview with journalists in the National Assembly.
"We will implement what is approved and planned in the medium-term expenditure programs, we will make the same expenditures," he said.
At the same time, the Deputy Minister admitted that at the moment he is not aware of whether the allocations for the needs of the Ministry of Defense of Armenia will be reduced by the 2026 budget.
"The budget will be approved by the National Assembly in December. I think everything will be determined then.
If your question is that our Defense Ministry will not acquire various means to carry out its functions or will acquire less, then I assure you that in 2026 the Defense Ministry will work within the same logic as in 2024, 2025," Sargsyan said.
Commenting on concerns that Azerbaijan is intensively arming itself, while the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia and the Minister of Finance noted the absence of a significant increase in defense spending, the Deputy Minister noted: "The military budget of Azerbaijan has exceeded the budget of the Republic of Armenia several times over the past 30 years. If your concern is that we should increase our defense budget to the Azerbaijani one, this will not happen."
In any case, the increase in allocations will depend on the ability of the state treasury to cover these expenses, the Defense Ministry representative concluded.
Earlier, Armenian Finance Minister Vahe Hovhannisyan said that, against the backdrop of the initialing of the peace agreement with Azerbaijan in Washington, the country's authorities plan to reduce the share of defense spending in the 2026 budget, compared to 2025. This is already included in the draft budget, he noted. At the same time, it was unclear whether this was a reduction in absolute amounts or only a reduction in the share in the budget structure while maintaining the current level of spending.
The next day, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, commenting on the statement of the head of the Ministry of Finance, noted that Armenia does not intend to increase the military budget in 2026. "Perhaps there will be no significant increase in spending or an increase in defense spending in the 2026 budget at all. I think this is logical, at least this is our assessment at the moment," Pashinyan said.
On the same day, Azerbaijani President Ilzham Aliyev said that the country is building up its military power to ensure security, but does not want war. "We must be ready for war at any moment, because the course of processes in the world is such that it is impossible to predict what will happen tomorrow," he said. According to the president, after the end of the Second Karabakh War in 2020, the country has improved its armed forces - the number of special forces was increased by thousands of fighters. In addition, the country has acquired new UAVs and artillery systems, and signed contracts for the purchase of new combat aircraft.
According to the state budget of Armenia for 2025, defense spending is planned at 6.1% of GDP (664.6 billion drams - more than $ 1.7 billion), which is 20% higher than the 2024 figure. Armenia has almost doubled its defense spending compared to 2020-2021, when the budget was about 312 billion drams.
Meanwhile, Azerbaijan's military budget has already reached $ 5 billion in 2025