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Armenian Official Praises U.S. House Panel For Military Aid Increase

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  • Armenian Official Praises U.S. House Panel For Military Aid Increase

    Radio Free Europe, Czech republic
    June 30 2004

    Armenian Official Praises U.S. House Panel For Military Aid Increase

    By Hrach Melkumian 30/06/2004 14:11

    A senior Armenian official commended on Tuesday a key subcommittee of
    the U.S. House of Representatives for supporting equal U.S. military
    assistance to Armenia and Azerbaijan opposed by the White House.

    Deputy Foreign Minister Ruben Shugarian also said Yerevan should
    respond by expanding military cooperation with Washington.

    A bill approved by the subcommittee last week calls for $5 million in
    military financing to each of the two countries locked in a bitter
    conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. The earlier version of the bill
    drafted by the administration of President George W. Bush would
    allocate $8 million to Azerbaijan and only $2 million to Armenia.

    In an interview with RFE/RL, Shugarian welcomed the amendment which
    has yet to be endorsed by the full House Appropriations Committee. He
    said it was not only the result of heavy Armenian-American lobbying
    but also an `explanatory work' conducted by Armenia's foreign and
    defense ministries.

    Shugarian took issue with the Bush administration's arguments that
    Azerbaijan deserves greater military aid because it has already
    committed troops for the U.S.-led missions in Iraq and Afghanistan.
    `No matter how much countries differ in their attitude toward Iraq
    developments, this can not be the decisive argument because the issue
    relates to our region,' he said. `There is a frozen conflict in our
    region and when the parity is disrupted...there arise some dangers.'

    But Shugarian also stressed that Armenia, which relies on a military
    alliance with Russia in its national security policy, should seek
    closer military ties with the United States if it is to maintain the
    aid parity. `We should think in the future about expanding the
    [defense cooperation] programs if we want to continue to keep that
    parity because the aid depends on our proposals as well,' said
    Armenia's former longtime ambassador to Washington.

    The Armenian leadership has already taken steps in that direction in
    recent years, stepping up its participation in NATO's Partnership for
    Peace program and promising to join the U.S.-led `coalition of the
    willing' in Iraq with a small contingent of non-combat military
    personnel. A team of Armenian military drivers, doctors and demining
    experts is expected to be deployed in Iraq in September.

    Shugarian denied any U.S. pressure behind the deployment plans,
    saying that Yerevan will continue to exercise caution in its Iraqi
    policy primarily because of the existence of a vulnerable ethnic
    Armenian community in Iraq. `I can say that both the State Department
    and the White House understand our approach,' he said.

    Unlike neighboring Georgia and Azerbaijan, Armenia declined to
    endorse the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq last year and did not sent
    armed combat units to the country. It at the same time welcomed the
    quick overthrow of Saddam Hussein's regime.
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