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Congress Approves $ 40 Million For Armenia; Maintains Karabakh Aid;

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  • Congress Approves $ 40 Million For Armenia; Maintains Karabakh Aid;

    CONGRESS APPROVES $ 40 MILLION FOR ARMENIA; MAINTAINS KARABAKH AID; KEEPS MILITARY ASSISTANCE PARITY IN FY2012 FOREIGN AID BILL

    noyan tapan
    2011-12-21 11:00:23

    WASHINGTON, DC - The Senate and House finalized the Fiscal Year 2012
    (FY12) U.S. foreign assistance package this past weekend, approving $
    40 million in U.S. assistance to Armenia, maintaining current funding
    levels for Nagorno Karabakh, and calling for military assistance
    parity for Armenia and Azerbaijan, reported the Armenian National
    Committee of America (ANCA).

    "Armenian Americans want to thank all our friends among the memberships
    of the appropriating committees on both the House and Senate sides
    for enforcing military aid parity and for holding the line on aid to
    Armenia and Artsakh in the face of across the board cuts in America's
    foreign aid spending," said Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the
    ANCA. "We will, in the coming months, work to materially help families
    in the homeland, through increased aid to Armenia and a clear mandate
    for an expanded developmental aid program for Karabakh in the FY13
    foreign aid bill, as well as, the granting of a second Millennium
    Challenge package to Armenia, and the negotiation of bilateral
    U.S.-Armenia economic accords to expand trade and foster job-creation."

    In terms of U.S. aid to the Caucasus, Congress approved President
    Obama's proposed economic assistance levels, including $ 40 million
    for Armenia, $ 16.6 million for Azerbaijan, and $ 66 million for
    Georgia. In a report accompanying the foreign aid bill, Senate and
    House conferees made specific mention that there should be parity
    in both Foreign Military Finance (FMF) and International Military
    Education and Training (IMET) levels to Armenia and Azerbaijan. While
    President Obama had requested $ 3 million in FMF funding for each
    country, the IMET funds he had proposed for Azerbaijan ($ 900,000)
    were twice that for Armenia.

    Congress also agreed to provide assistance for Nagorno Karabakh "at
    levels consistent with prior years, and for ongoing needs related to
    the conflict," while urging a "peaceful resolution of the conflict."

    U.S. assistance spending levels to Karabakh have been approximately $
    2 million a year, despite higher Congressional recommendations.

    ANCA Government Affairs Director Kate Nahapetian had outlined key
    community foreign aid priorities in testimony submitted to the House
    Appropriations Subcommittee on Foreign Operations earlier this year.

    The full text of her testimony is available at:
    http://www.anca.org/assets/pdf/testimony/2011.pdf

    The foreign assistance package was part of an "omnibus" bill which set
    funding levels for nine critical areas including Defense, Energy and
    Water, Financial Services, Homeland Security, Interior/Environment,
    Labor/Health and Human Services/Education, the Legislative Branch,
    Military Construction/Veterans Affairs, and State/Foreign Operations.

    Congress will begin consideration of the FY13 foreign aid levels as
    early as March of 2013.

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