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House Adopts $48 Million For Armenia, $10 Million For Karabagh

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  • House Adopts $48 Million For Armenia, $10 Million For Karabagh

    HOUSE ADOPTS $48 MILLION FOR ARMENIA, $10 MILLION FOR KARABAGH

    armradio.am
    11.07.2009 13:11

    On Thursday evening, the U.S. House of Representatives approved the
    earlier Appropriations Committee requests for $48 million in U.S. aid
    to Armenia and $10 million in aid to Karabagh, while maintaining
    military assistance parity between Armenia and Azerbaijan as part of
    the fiscal year (FY) 2010 foreign assistance package, reported the
    Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA.)

    House Appropriations Subcommittee on Foreign Operations Chairwoman
    Nita Lowey (D-NY), Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-chair Mark Kirk
    (R-IL) and Armenian Genocide resolution lead sponsor Adam Schiff
    (D-CA), all active supporters of Armenia assistance provisions,
    welcomed the House decision.

    Rep. Kirk noted that the bill "also includes a new requirement for the
    Administration to consult with Congress before exercising its waiver
    authority for assistance to Azerbaijan granted under section 907 of the
    Foreign Assistance Act." Specifically, the bill report language states:

    "The Committee reaffirms that Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act is
    still in effect, pending a settlement of the ongoing dispute between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan over the status of Nagorno-Karabakh. The
    Committee supports the so-called "Minsk Process" that provides a
    forum for negotiations toward a peaceful settlement of the conflict,
    and encourages the Department of State to continue its efforts
    to reenergize the negotiating process this year. As this process
    moves forward, the Committee believes that all parties in the
    conflict must refrain from threats, incitement to the use of force,
    or other inflammatory rhetoric. Recognizing that the Congress gave
    the President broad waiver authority with respect to Section 907 in
    the fiscal year 2002 Appropriations Act and that this waiver has been
    exercised in every fiscal year since then, the Committee directs that
    the Department of State consult with the Committees on Appropriations
    before exercising this waiver for fiscal year 2010 to ensure that
    all conditions under the waiver provision are being fully met."

    Rep. Schiff noted that, for the first time, "the report accompanying
    the [foreign aid] bill references the policy of parity in military
    assistance provided to Armenia and Azerbaijan." Despite Bush and Obama
    Administration calls to break military assistance parity, Congress has
    maintained the provision, concerned about providing greater military
    assistance to an Azerbaijani leadership which continues threats of
    war against neighboring Armenia and Nagorno Karabagh.

    The FY 2010 House Appropriations bill keeps foreign military financing
    to both countries at $3 million and International Military Education
    and Training (IMET) assistance at $450,000 each.

    The Senate Appropriations Committee approved President Obama's request
    of $30 million in assistance to Armenia, while cutting the overall
    foreign aid funding budget. Similar to previous years' measures,
    the bill does not make a specific assistance allocation for Nagorno
    Karabagh and remains silent on foreign military assistance and IMET
    funding.

    "The ANCA welcomes House passage of the foreign aid bill, and
    particularly the increased assistance for Nagorno Karabagh and
    maintaining military assistance parity for Azerbaijan and Armenia,"
    reported ANCA Chairman Ken Hachikian. "Given the ongoing economic
    hardship caused by the Turkish and Azerbaijani blockades of Armenia,
    and President Aliyev's consistent threats of war against his neighbors,
    we are disappointed with the Senate Appropriations Committee's
    allocation of only $30 million for Armenia. We look forward to
    working with Senate and House conferees to ensure that the final
    bill reflects appropriate funding levels, which promote stability
    and economic progress in the region."

    The Senate has yet to consider its version of the foreign aid bill,
    after which Senate and House appropriators will confer on a final
    version of the measure, to be sent to President Obama for signature.
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