Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Anca Chairman Ken Hachikian Today Sent A Letter To Secretary Of Stat

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Anca Chairman Ken Hachikian Today Sent A Letter To Secretary Of Stat

    ANCA CHAIRMAN KEN HACHIKIAN TODAY SENT A LETTER TO SECRETARY OF STATE HILLARY CLINTON

    Panorama.am
    18:15 21/08/2009

    Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) Chairman Ken Hachikian
    today sent a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton outlining
    the concerns of the Armenian American community regarding the recent
    biased remarks by Matt Bryza, the U.S. Co-Chair to the OSCE Minsk
    Group charged with helping to negotiate a settlement of the Nagorno
    Karabagh conflict.

    The four-page letter, dated August 20, 2009, addressed, in detail,
    recent unfair, inaccurate, and counter-productive statements by Bryza,
    and, more broadly, expressed the view that his actions reflect the
    failings of an Administration that, having already broken a series of
    pledges to Armenian Americans, is now in the process of effectively
    handing over decision-making on U.S. policy on Armenian issues to
    the Turkish government: In the letter, Hachikian stressed: "Today,
    seven months after the start of the Obama-Biden Administration,
    we are seriously concerned that this Administration has abdicated
    its responsibilities by effectively outsourcing our nation's foreign
    policy with respect to Armenian issues to the Republic of Turkey, as
    every single policy dealing with Armenia has been made along the lines
    that Turkey has dictated, rather than along the sound principles of
    morality and democracy that you, President Obama and Vice President
    Biden unambiguously articulated during your presidential campaigns
    last year."

    The full text of the letter is provided below.

    "Dear Secretary Clinton,

    I am writing on behalf of the Armenian National Committee of America
    (ANCA) to voice the Armenian American community's grave concerns
    regarding recent unfair, inaccurate, and counter- productive statements
    by the U.S. Co-Chair of the OSCE Minks Group, Matthew Bryza, regarding
    the Republics of Armenia and Nagorno Karabagh.

    Mr. Bryza's recent actions as a part of the Obama-Biden Administration,
    as well as his past conduct during his time as Deputy Assistant
    Secretary, as U.S. Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group, as a senior
    National Security Council staff member, and as an Eurasian energy
    advisor for the Department, reflect a pattern of consistent, material,
    and transparent bias against Armenia and Nagorno Karabagh. His behavior
    in the months since President Obama's inauguration are especially
    troubling because they stand in such dramatic contrast to the public
    commitments that the President, Vice President, and that you made to
    the American electorate during the 2008 Presidential campaign.

    As you may know, the ANCA has consistently registered public concerns
    regarding Mr. Bryza's biased diplomacy on Armenia-related matters,
    including his pro-Azerbaijani bias in the Nagorno Karabagh peace
    process and his longstanding role as a promoter of U.S.

    complicity in Turkey's denials of the Armenian Genocide. Our
    community's attention was again drawn to his representation of our
    government's policies following a speech he delivered, on August 7,
    2009, in Tsakhkadzor, Armenia, as well as by news reports that he
    is being considered as a candidate to serve as our next Ambassador
    to Azerbaijan. In his remarks in Tsakhkadzor, Mr. Bryza, once again,
    made a number of statements that directly contradict the President's
    pledge to work toward a "lasting and durable settlement of the Nagorno
    Karabagh conflict that is agreeable to all parties, and based upon
    America's founding commitment to the principles of democracy and
    self determination."

    Most notably, Mr. Bryza has argued that the fatally flawed Madrid
    principles are a balanced set of concessions, when, at their heart,
    they represent nothing more than a major, irreversible, up-front
    concession of fundamental security on the part of the Armenian side
    with only a vague promise that some undefined process, involving
    undetermined actors, will take place regarding Nagorno Karabagh's
    status, according to his own words, "at some point" in the future.

    The President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, has made it painfully
    clear that he will not even honor this weakly worded and effectively
    meaningless expectation. President Aliyev has chosen to reserve his
    public comments for threats of renewed aggression and assurances that,
    even if Armenia were to surrender territories, "it may take a year,
    maybe 10 years, maybe 100 years, or it will never be possible" to
    reach the point where Azerbaijan would consent to a mere "discussion"
    of Nagorno Karabagh's status.

    This "compromise" is not a fair deal, but rather a one-sided surrender
    of Nagorno Karabagh's rights, status, and security, in large measure,
    engineered by Mr. Bryza. This settlement, which would cement Armenia
    into profound strategic and military disadvantages and ensure continued
    regional instability, is, at present, being imposed upon the Armenian
    people through the full force and leverage of the U.S. government.

    In his remarks, Mr. Bryza compounded his biased defense of these
    flawed principles by falsely claiming that the Azerbaijani side
    has made a "concession" by agreeing to merely discuss the matter of
    Nagorno Karabagh's self-determination. The fact is that Azerbaijan
    has neither the moral right nor the practical ability to grant
    either freedom or independence to Nagorno Karabagh. He also, during
    the question and answer period, assigned to the people of Nagorno
    Karabagh a second-tier right to self-determination, one that requires
    the assent of Azerbaijan, as opposed to the right to independence
    enjoyed today by the people of Kosovo and recognized officially by
    the U.S. government despite the objections of Serbia.

    Also of profound concern in Mr. Bryza's comments at Tsakhkadzor was
    his false assertion that Nagorno Karabagh's exclusion from the OSCE
    Minsk Group peace process was driven by Armenia's request to the
    others parties to the negotiations. This is simply not the case.

    In addition to the concerns I have outlined regarding Mr. Bryza's
    recent comments, we remain seriously troubled that he has continued
    to stand in the way of broad-based dialogue between the governments
    and peoples of the U.S. and Nagorno Karabagh. In his capacity as
    OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair, instead of promoting open communication,
    he has enforced a set of outdated and counter-productive restrictions
    that block the hope for greater mutual understanding.

    He has, as well, even as recently as the current foreign aid cycle,
    failed to facilitate desperately needed U.S. development assistance
    programs in Nagorno Karabagh. Finally, he has undermined his own
    credibility by making the patently false claim that neither he nor
    his State Department colleagues have applied pressure to Armenia
    regarding the settlement of Nagorno Karabagh.

    The concerns I have raised regarding the one-sided Nagorno Karabagh
    diplomacy that Mr. Bryza has conducted on behalf of the U.S.

    government reflect our community's broader disappointment regarding
    the Obama-Biden Administration's failure to honor its many pledges on
    Armenian issues. Foremost among these, of course, is the President's
    broken promise to recognize the Armenian Genocide.

    Rather than upholding this crystal clear covenant, the Administration
    has, instead, aggressively attacked the spirit and letter of this
    commitment by promoting Turkey's artificial "roadmap" and pressuring
    Armenia to accept a "historical commission" that, in yet another
    transparent attempt by Ankara to perpetuate its campaign of genocide
    denial, calls into question the veracity of the Armenian Genocide. The
    Administration has, in addition, sharply cut economic and other aid
    to Armenia, despite the President's pledge to maintain assistance
    levels. This pattern of behavior represents a breach of faith with
    Armenian Americans, fundamentally damages our government's friendship
    with Armenia, and effectively eliminates our country's ability to
    act as an honest broker in the region.

    Today, seven months after the start of the Obama-Biden Administration,
    we are seriously concerned that this Administration has abdicated
    its responsibilities by effectively outsourcing our nation's foreign
    policy with respect to Armenian issues to the Republic of Turkey, as
    every single policy dealing with Armenia has been made along the lines
    that Turkey has dictated, rather than along the sound principles of
    morality and democracy that you, President Obama and Vice President
    Biden unambiguously articulated during your presidential campaigns
    last year.

    Thank you for your consideration of our views. We respectfully request
    an immediate personal meeting between you and the Armenian American
    community's civic, religious, and charitable leaders so that we can
    address these matters in greater detail.
Working...
X