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Pallone Says Aliyev's Willingness To Resort To Force Is Reason Enoug

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  • Pallone Says Aliyev's Willingness To Resort To Force Is Reason Enoug

    PRESS RELEASE

    Jennifer Karch Cannata
    Press Secretary
    Office of U.S. Rep. Frank Pallone, Jr.
    420 Cannon House Office Building
    Washington, DC 20515
    (202) 225-4671 office
    (202) 225-9665 fax

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    May 21, 2004

    PALLONE SAYS ALIYEV'S WILLINGNESS TO RESORT TO FORCE IS REASON ENOUGH
    TO MAINTAIN AID PARITY

    Washington, D.C. --- U.S. Rep. Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ), cochairman
    of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues, today expressed
    concern regarding Azeri President Ilham Aliyev's recent statements
    that Azerbaijan is willing to use military force to resolve the
    Nagorno Karabagh conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    "Such statements are unsettling and send a message to Armenia, as well
    as to all those involved in working toward a peaceful resolution, that
    Azerbaijan is prepared to undertake a military approach to addressing
    the conflict should recommendations by the Minsk Group not align with
    Azerbaijan's position," the New Jersey congressman said earlier this
    week during a speech on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives.

    During an interview with the BBC last week, President Aliyev said
    that while he would continue to try to resolve the Nagorno Karabagh
    conflict by peaceful means, the Azeri army is able at any moment
    to free, what President Aliyev called, "our territory." President
    Aliyev also stated, "We have every right to do that, to restore our
    territorial integrity."

    "President Aliyev's actions and statements do not signal a willingness
    to negotiate and in fact, I think they illustrate the opposite,"
    Pallone said. "If there is any chance that the parties can move
    in the direction of a peaceful resolve, President Aliyev must show
    that he is willing to consider options developed by the Minsk Group
    without threatening military actions."

    During the speech, Pallone also called on President Bush and Congress
    to not support a military resolution to the Nagorno Karabagh conflict
    and to restore military aid parity between Armenia and Azerbaijan.


    "I strongly believe we must do everything in our power here in Congress
    to signal that we will not support the use of military power to address
    this conflict," Pallone continued in his speech on the House floor.
    "Amid rising tension and animosity in the region, with two new leaders
    in both Armenia and Azerbaijan, it is more important today than ever
    for the United States to be sure that no signal is sent suggesting
    that one side is being provided a military advantage over the other."

    Pallone cited President Aliyev's statement during the BBC interview
    that the Azeri government's military spending has increased over the
    last couple of years and "will keep increasing in the future."

    "At this time, the U.S. should not be providing resources to
    Azerbaijan that can, in any measure, be turned into military
    efforts against Armenia to reclaim Nagorno Karabagh," Pallone said.
    "President Aliyev's comment regarding current and future increases in
    Azerbaijan's military funding does not put me at ease that funding
    from the U.S., either directly or indirectly, will not be used to
    unleash a military campaign against the people of Nagorno Karabagh,"

    Earlier this year, President Bush's budget proposal included
    unequal military aid to Armenia and Azerbaijan. This request
    dismissed a unilateral policy agreement between the Congress and
    the Administration that there be military parity between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan. However, language included in the waiver states that any
    assistance to Azerbaijan should not be used to "undermine or hamper"
    the Karabagh peace process or "be used for offensive purposes against
    Armenia or the Armenian communities in the South Caucuses."

    -30-
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