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AAA: Congress Affirms Military Assistance Parity For Armenia andAzer

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  • AAA: Congress Affirms Military Assistance Parity For Armenia andAzer

    Armenian Assembly of America
    122 C Street, NW, Suite 350
    Washington, DC 20001
    Phone: 202-393-3434
    Fax: 202-638-4904
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: www.armenianassembly.org
     
    PRESS RELEASE
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    November 20, 2004
    CONTACT: David Zenian
    Email: [email protected]

    CONGRESS AFFIRMS MILITARY ASSISTANCE PARITY FOR ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN
    Assembly hails leadership of Congressman Knollenberg

    Washington, DC - The House of Representatives today approved the
    Omnibus Bill for Fiscal Year 2005, providing equal levels of military
    assistance to Armenia and Azerbaijan. The spending package, which
    allocates $8.75 million in military financing to both countries,
    thwarts the Administration's attempt to provide Azerbaijan a $6
    million increase over Armenia by placing the neighboring countries
    on equal footing.

    "We commend Armenian Caucus Co-Chair Joe Knollenberg (R-MI), for his
    outstanding leadership on the House Foreign Operations Subcommittee
    on Appropriations to reinstate U.S. balance and impartiality in
    dealing with the Karabakh conflict," said Assembly Board of Trustees
    Chairman Hirair Hovnanian. "We are also very appreciative of Senator
    Mitch McConnell (R-KY), the Majority Whip and the Chair of the Senate
    Foreign Operations Subcommittee on Appropriations, for his efforts
    to maintain security assistance parity between Armenia and Azerbaijan
    in the Senate version as well."

    "The Assembly welcomes today's vote and praises our friends in both
    chambers for their steadfast support on issues of importance to
    the Armenian-American community," said Assembly Board of Directors
    Chairman Anthony Barsamian. He added that had the requested disparity
    in military assistance been enacted, U.S. credibility as an impartial
    and leading mediator in the ongoing Karabakh peace process would
    have been hampered. It would have also potentially undermined the
    fragile ten-year cease-fire between the neighboring countries, which
    is particularly worrisome given Baku's recent threats against Armenia
    and Nagorno Karabakh.

    In September, NATO canceled its PfP exercise in Baku due to
    Azerbaijan's barring of Armenia, an active participant in the program.
    Azerbaijan's refusal to honor international commitments is part of an
    escalating pattern throughout 2004 of its hostility towards all things
    Armenian. By not properly condemning the murder of an Armenian officer
    at a NATO event earlier this year, by periodically threatening Armenia
    and Karabakh with another military offensive, and by not denouncing
    the remarks of its Defense Ministry spokesperson predicting Armenia's
    conquest by Azerbaijan within 25 years, Azerbaijan's senior leadership
    has repeatedly shown their true colors to the international community.

    This month, the government of Azerbaijan proposed an ill-conceived
    and one-sided U.N. General Assembly resolution that could derail
    the Nagoro Karabakh peace process spearheaded by the Organization
    for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) and the Minsk Group
    co-chaired by the United States, France and Russia. It is a hostile
    declaration against the entire negotiating process, including progress
    made in the recent Astana round of negotiations.

    For its part, the government of Armenia has repeatedly indicated
    its desire to peacefully resolve the conflict, and prior to a full
    settlement being achieved, has also offered confidence-building
    measures (CBM's) to bring immediate benefit to all peoples. Azerbaijan
    has chosen a different approach - blockade, rejection of CBM's and
    increasingly shrill war rhetoric.

    An integral component of U.S.-Armenia relationship is the security
    dimension, which has grown considerably since the September 11,
    2001 terrorist attacks on the United States. Since those seminal
    events, the Armenian Government has undertaken a number of security
    measures aimed at assisting the war on terrorism, measures which have
    been praised by President Bush and other high-ranking U.S. officials.
    Over the past few years, Armenia has also strengthened its ties to NATO
    by following through on its Partnership for Peace (PfP) commitments,
    sent a peacekeeping unit to Kosovo as part of KFOR, and is preparing
    to send an Armenian contingent to Iraq to assist in the stabilization
    and reconstruction efforts in that country.

    The Omnibus spending package also approved "not less than" $75
    million in assistance to Armenia, an increase of $13 million over
    the Administration's FY 2005 budget request. An additional $3 million
    in humanitarian assistance for Nagorno Karabakh was also allocated.
    Under the guidance of Senator McConnell, the Senate, for the first
    time, provided an earmark for Karabakh. The United States remains the
    only nation in the world that allocates direct humanitarian assistance
    to Karabakh.

    This April, Armenian Caucus Co-Chair Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) and
    Caucus member John E. Sweeney (R-NY), along with over 40 of their
    congressional colleagues, wrote to Chairman of the House Foreign
    Operations Subcommittee on Appropriations Jim Kolbe (R-AZ) urging that
    the subcommittee maintain symmetry in levels of any military/security
    assistance for Armenia and Azerbaijan. In addition, they requested
    "not less than" $75 million in economic assistance for Armenia and
    continuing humanitarian assistance for Nagorno Karabakh in FY 2005.
    The Assembly strongly supported this initiative by urging Members to
    sign on to this letter during its advocacy portion of its National
    Conference and via a nationwide Action Alert.

    The Senate plans to vote on the spending measure later today.
    Once passed by the other chamber, the bill will be sent to President
    Bush for his expected signature.

    The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
    nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness
    of Armenian issues. It is a 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt membership
    organization.

    NR#2004-101

    --Boundary_(ID_YCsFgaKE8nBHPOcbUEoxPg)--
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