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House Committee Opposes Funding For Railroad That Bypasses Armenia:

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  • House Committee Opposes Funding For Railroad That Bypasses Armenia:

    HOUSE COMMITTEE OPPOSES FUNDING FOR RAILROAD THAT BYPASSES ARMENIA: LAWMAKERS CALL PROJECT "PURELY POLITICAL"

    Noyan Tapan
    Armenians Today
    Jun 15 2006

    WASHINGTON, JUNE 15, NOYAN TAPAN - ARMENIANS TODAY. The Armenian
    Assembly of America commended Members of the House Financial Services
    Committee for adhering to U.S. policy goals of regional cooperation
    and economic integration by ensuring that no Export-Import funding
    would be used for a proposed rail link project that would connect
    Turkey, Georgia and Azerbaijan, while bypassing Armenia.

    Lawmakers approved on June 14 H.R. 5068, the Export-Import Bank
    Reauthorization Act of 2006, which included an amendment introduced
    by Congressman Joseph Crowley (D-NY), along with Congressmen Edward
    Royce (R-CA) and Brad Sherman (D-CA), ensuring that taxpayer dollars
    will not be spent on efforts that would exclude Armenia from regional
    projects and commercial opportunities.

    Unanimous approval of this amendment by the House Financial Services
    Committee sends a strong message that it does not endorse attempts to
    undermine U.S. policy goals, which seeks to normalize Armenian-Turkish
    relations and to reach a peaceful settlement in the Nagorno Karabakh
    conflict. Moreover, the Committee's action echoes recent statements
    made by Ambassador-Designate to Azerbaijan, Anne Derse, who indicated
    that the proposed railroad would "not be beneficial to regional
    integration..."

    "With this amendment, we are sending a message to the governments
    of Turkey and Azerbaijan that continually excluding Armenia in
    regional projects fosters instability," Crowley told Members of the
    Committee. "Bypassing Armenia is just another attempt to further
    suffocate this republic, which has made great strides in democratic
    and economic reforms notwithstanding its neighbors' hostility. If the
    Caucasus region is to move forward, we must ensure that all countries
    move forward together at the same time."

    During the mark-up, Royce noted that the amendment was modeled after
    H.R. 3361, the South Caucasus Integration and Open Railroads Act,
    and said that taxpayer dollars should not be used to exclude Armenia
    which is already facing dual blockades by Turkey and Azerbaijan. The
    legislation, which also has a Senate counterpart, would prohibit
    U.S. assistance for the promotion or development of a railroad that
    would connect the three countries and exclude Armenia.

    The House bill currently has 85 cosponsors.

    Sherman, who also addressed the Committee, said that the European
    Union has already publicly indicated that it will not finance a rail
    project in which Armenia is not involved.

    "Export-Import made a huge mistake when it approved finance guarantees
    for the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline in 2003," Sherman told the Assembly. "This
    amendment puts Congress on record opposing a repeat of that fiasco
    embodied by this ill-conceived and wasteful rail project."

    "Our foreign assistance should help end conflict by fostering
    cooperation," Sherman continued. "We should not entrench divisions
    by financing projects which exclude countries friendly to the United
    States."

    Representative Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) also spoke in favor of the
    Crowley-Royce-Sherman amendment and submitted a statement for the
    mark-up, which stated in part: "Armenia is a friend and an ally of
    the United States that for too long has been subjected to blockades
    and aggression from its neighbors, Turkey and Azerbaijan....Allowing
    the exclusion of Armenia from important transportation routes would
    stymie the emergence of this region as an important East-West trade
    corridor. It is in our economic and security interests to ensure that
    the aggression against Armenia comes to an end."

    "We thank Congressman Crowley, along with Congressmen Royce and
    Sherman, for their leadership on this crucial issue which is a
    key Assembly priority for the 109th Congress. We also commend the
    Armenian-American community for rallying support for this important
    initiative," said Executive Director Bryan Ardouny. "Passage of this
    amendment protects U.S. goals and interests in the region and ensures
    that attempts by Turkey and Azerbaijan to isolate Armenia will not
    go unanswered."

    The proposed railway is estimated to cost upwards of 0 million.

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev told an Azeri news agency last
    summer that, "We are currently working on a new project - a new rail
    road Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku..If we succeed with this project,
    the Armenians will end in complete isolation, which would create an
    additional problem for their future, their already bleak future..."

    Armenian government officials have repeatedly said that a new costly
    railway is unnecessary given that a railroad linking Armenia, Georgia
    and Turkey already exists.

    The next step in the legislative process is a vote in the full House
    on H.R. 5068.
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