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Rice Doubts Any Solution Soon In Nagorno-Karabakh

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  • Rice Doubts Any Solution Soon In Nagorno-Karabakh

    RICE DOUBTS ANY SOLUTION SOON IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH
    By Susan Cornwell

    Reuters
    March 12 2008

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
    expressed doubt on Wednesday that the conflict between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh can be solved soon, saying there
    are problems on both sides.

    Rice spoke at a Capitol Hill hearing after two lawmakers expressed
    concern about the possibility of another war in the Caucasus region
    and asked why the Bush administration was seeking more military aid
    for Azerbaijan than Armenia.

    Nagorno-Karabakh was seized by pro-Armenian forces from Azerbaijan
    in a war in the 1990s in which 35,000 people died.

    Sixteen soldiers from both sides died in clashes in Nagorno-Karabakh
    this month, one of the worst breaches of the 1994 cease-fire there.

    Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matt Bryza visited the region
    afterwards and expressed concerns to both Armenian and Azeri officials
    that the clashes not recur.

    "In the immediate future I don't know that Nagorno-Karabakh can get
    solved," Rice said at the House appropriations subcommittee hearing
    on the State Department's budget.

    "We have been close several times," Rice said. "And so we'll continue
    to try to work that. But I just have to emphasize, we have problems
    on both sides right now, and we're trying to make sure that both
    sides act responsibly."

    Rice said a state of emergency in Armenia, imposed recently after
    rioting against the results of a presidential election, had made it
    necessary to suspend some U.S. programs there.

    But Rep. Adam Schiff, a California Democrat, complained that the
    Bush administration had proposed several times as much U.S. aid in
    one category of military assistance to Azerbaijan as Armenia in the
    coming year, which he said broke a tradition of parity in assistance
    for the two countries.

    "The Azeri government, in particular, President Aliyev, have been
    ratcheting up anti-Armenian rhetoric over the past few months
    in Nagorno-Karabakh," said Schiff, who has a large number of
    Armenian-Americans in his district.

    Michigan Republican Joe Knollenberg said he would favor discontinuing
    military aid to Azerbaijan. "I strongly believe that, instead of using
    this funding to help in the war in terror, they're gearing up for,
    as they say, a regional war."

    "We are very concerned about the heating-up rhetoric," Rice told the
    lawmakers. "But I think the way to do it, the way to deal with this,
    is to try to maintain open channels to both sides and to try to bring
    them to a solution."

    For fiscal 2009, which starts in October, the State Department
    has requested $300,000 for Armenia and $900,000 for Azerbaijan in
    International Military Education and Training funds, which offer U.S.

    military education and training that can facilitate contributions to
    peacekeeping operations.

    The Bush administration has also requested $3 million for Armenia
    and the same for Azerbaijan in Foreign Military Financing, U.S. funds
    that support foreign militaries, including training and equipment.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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