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At least four reasons why Bryza shouldn't represent US in Azerbaijan

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  • At least four reasons why Bryza shouldn't represent US in Azerbaijan

    At least four reasons why Matthew Bryza shouldn't represent US in Azerbaijan

    10:48 - 31.07.10


    US Senator John Kerry (D-MA), Chairman of the Foreign Relations
    Committee, today announced that his panel will hold a vote next
    Tuesday, August 3rd, on the confirmation of Matthew Bryza, President
    Obama's controversial nominee to serve U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan,
    despite the nominee's evasive and incomplete answers to a series of
    written questions submitted to him by Senate Majority Leader Harry
    Reid (D-NV) and key members of this influential panel, reported the
    Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)

    "Mr. Bryza's evasive, unresponsive, and incomplete written answers to
    the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, even more than his spoken
    testimony before this panel, confirm our reservations about his
    troubling track record, and clearly confirm that he is not the right
    person to serve as U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan," said Aram
    Hamparian, Executive Director of the ANCA.

    "American diplomacy in the region would be well served by a fresh
    start, with a new ambassador who doesn't have deep ties into
    Azerbaijan's corrupt government, a history of turning a blind-eye to
    Baku's aggression, or serious conflict of interest issues."

    "We want to thank Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, and offer our
    sincere appreciation to Senators Boxer and Menendez and all the those
    who have worked hard to ensure that we send an ambassador to Baku who
    can effectively represent U.S. interests, persuasively advance
    American values, and - crucially, for the cause of peace - constrain
    an increasingly belligerent Aliyev regime from acting on its threats
    of renewed war," added Hamparian.

    Bryza's July 22nd confirmation hearing before the Foreign Relations
    Committee raised more questions than answered on a range of issues,
    prompting Senators Barbara Boxer (D-CA), Robert Menendez (D-NJ), Russ
    Feingold (D-WI) and Chairman Kerry to submit written questions to the
    nominee and, significantly, prompted a detailed letter of inquiry to
    the State Department directly from Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

    Azerbaijani Aggression:

    During Bryza's July 22nd committee appearance, he confirmed, for the
    first time by an Administration official, the widely reported
    news that Azerbaijan had, in fact, initiated the June 18, 2010
    incident on the Nagorno Karabagh frontier that led to the death of
    four Nagorno Karabagh and one Azerbaijani soldier. In response to a
    question from Senator Boxer, he acknowledged Azerbaijan sparked the
    conflict, but then sought to deflect responsibility onto Nagorno
    Karabagh forces, which he mistakenly described as
    "Armenia[n]," stating: "There was an Azerbaijani movement across the
    line of contact, Armenia responded, resulting in deaths." In
    response to Senator Boxer's follow-up written question asking "Why
    hasn't the U.S. government been more forceful in its condemnation of
    Azerbaijan," Bryza retreated from his cautious spoken remarks, saying
    only that: "the full details of what occurred on June 18 are not
    known."

    In response to a separate written question by Senator Boxer as to
    whether Azerbaijan's June 18th attack against Nagorno Karabagh
    represented a violation of Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act,
    which restricts U.S. aid to Azerbaijan unless it takes demonstrable
    steps to cease offensive uses of force against Armenia and Nagorno
    Karabakh, Bryza repeated: "The full details of what occurred on June
    18 are not known," and then went on to defend the Administration's
    waiver of Section 907 and to generally praise Azerbaijan as a
    "important security partner" to the United States.

    Azerbaijan's Desecration of the Djulfa Cemetery In response to written
    inquiries about Bryza's prolonged silence in the wake of Azerbaijan's
    December 2005 demolition of the Armenian cemetery in Djulfa, Bryza
    argued that he had made private comments on this matter to Azerbaijani
    Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov, but could not point to any public
    remarks until March of the following year, when he was confronted with
    questions on this subject by journalists at a Yerevan press
    conference. In the nearly three month period of Bryza's silence on
    Djulfa, this issue was covered in the international media and publicly
    condemned by U.S. Members of Congress, international NGOs, and the
    full European Parliament.

    Conflict of Interest:

    In response to concerns by Sen. Menendez regarding conflict of
    interest issues that arose regarding Bryza's wife, Zeyno Baran, and
    her professional work at the Hudson Institute advocating on U.S.
    policy toward Azerbaijan and the Caspian region, Bryza argued that,
    since January 2009, Baran had "shifted the focus of her work" from the
    South Caucasus to "Islam, democracy and extremism in Europe and the
    United States." (A Google search reveals numerous instances of public
    commentary by Baran regarding the South Caucasus since 2009.)

    The source of the funding for Baran's Center for Eurasia Policy
    program at the Hudson Institute remains unclear. The Hudson
    Institute has, as of today, refused to respond to a June 3, 2010
    written request from the ANCA that it publicly share its sources of
    funding from Turkey and Azerbaijan.

    Fast-tracking of Nomination

    An editorial published on Julky 30 in The Armenian Weekly voiced the
    Armenian American community's frustration with the Senator Kerry's
    fast-tracking of the Bryza nomination. "All citizens and Senators
    deserve a chance to meaningfully participate in the important
    Constitutional process of ambassadorial confirmations, especially when
    vital life-and-death issues are at stake, as they are in Nagorno
    Karabagh," noted the Weekly. "As Chairman of the Senate Foreign
    Relations Committee and a Senator representing America's oldest and
    one of its largest Armenian American communities, John Kerry should
    put the brakes on the Bryza nomination."




    Tert.am




    From: A. Papazian
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