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Ethnic Special Interests Should Not Guide US Foreign Policy

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  • Ethnic Special Interests Should Not Guide US Foreign Policy

    ETHNIC SPECIAL INTERESTS SHOULD NOT GUIDE US FOREIGN POLICY
    Jamila Scheve

    Alaska Dispatch
    http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/ethnic-special-interests-should-not-guide-us-foreign-policy
    Jan 18 2012

    In December 2010, following over a year of absence of U.S. envoy in
    Azerbaijan, President Obama recess appointed Matthew Bryza to the
    position. But after a year of obstruction by Senators Robert Menendez
    (D-NJ) and Barbara Boxer (D-CA), driven by Armenian-American ethnic
    special interest, Senate flouted the confirmation of Ambassador
    Bryza before the end of 2011. Consequently, the highly experienced
    U.S. diplomat had to vacate his position in January 2012, and
    U.S.-Azerbaijani relations were harmed. According to the Washington
    Post, Senate's failure to confirm Ambassador Bryza "offers a vivid
    example of how the larger U.S. national interest can fall victim to
    special-interest jockeying and political accommodation."

    The ethnic lobby now seeks to prolong the absence of U.S. envoy to
    Azerbaijan, thereby derailing U.S. foreign policy in this vital region
    bordering Iran and Russia. The Armenian-American organizations' main
    purpose of exerting pressure on nominations is to delay the appointment
    of an ambassador, create discontent and cause damage to the bilateral
    ties between US and Azerbaijan. They demand appointed persons to
    recognize a regime that confirms so-called "Armenian genocide"
    and violated the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan. Since 1988,
    as a result of Armenian territorial claims to Nagorno-Karabakh region
    of Azerbaijan, the two neighboring nations have been embroiled in a
    bitter dispute, which escalated into a full-scale war between 1991
    and 1994. Before the 1994 ceasefire, Armenian forces managed to
    occupy Nagorno-Karabakh and 7 other adjacent districts - in total
    nearly fifth of Azerbaijan's territory. Nearly 30,000 people have
    been killed, and over 800,000 Azerbaijani civilians were forcefully
    displaced from all of the occupied territories.

    For the past 20 years, the U.S. has been actively involved in attempts
    to resolve the conflict. Joining France and Russia within the framework
    of OSCE Minsk Group, U.S. diplomats, including Mr. Bryza, have
    been searching for a mutually acceptable solution to this first and
    bloodiest frozen conflict in the post-Soviet space. Azerbaijan has been
    a staunch U.S. ally in the "War on Terror," opening its airspace and
    contributing troops in support of the U.S.-led missions in Afghanistan
    and Iraq. Azerbaijan's significant oil and gas reserves, currently
    explored by Western energy companies, remain essential to Europe's
    energy security and independence from Russia's growing gas monopoly.

    During the same period, Armenia, which continues to occupy Azerbaijani
    territories against four U.N. Security Council and several U.N.
    General Assembly resolutions, fell into a regional isolation and was
    ranked by Forbes as the world's No. 2 worst economy in 2011. Left
    out of major regional economic projects, with its longest borders
    being closed and its energy infrastructure acquired by Russian
    energy giant, Armenia has turned into Russia's military post in the
    Caucasus. Unable to comprehend on the situation or to contribute
    towards resolving these problems, Armenian-American interest groups
    are instead engaged on their limited ethnocentric agenda to simply
    damage the U.S.-Azerbaijani relations.

    The continued absence of U.S. Ambassador in Azerbaijan will also
    benefit neighboring Iran. Absence of a US ambassador in Azerbaijan
    forces the latter to think that it is being neglected by the United
    States despite the fact Azerbaijan has been an US ally, sending
    its troops to fight shoulder-to-shoulder with their counterparts
    in Afganistan (earlier in Iraq and Kosovo) as well, providing vital
    airspace and airports for 1/3 of non-lethal supplies to US troops in
    Afganistan, and cooperating in the energy sphere to diversify energy
    resources for US and its allies in Europe and Israel. The absence
    of US ambassador, especially due to pressure from narrow Armenian
    interest groups in the light of Armenia being a Russian encampment,
    drives Azerbaijan away, leaving it on its own while Russia and Iran
    want to take advantage of it. Iran-supported groups and voices will
    revitalize condemning Azerbaijan's pro-Western policy claiming US
    ignores Azerbaijan. That certainly affects the mindset and opinion of
    the Azeri public who indeed see neglectful attitude of America towards
    Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan shares its longest border with Iran; over third
    of Iran's population, more than 25 million people, are Turkic-speaking
    Azerbaijanis; over two-thirds of Azerbaijan's population is Shiite
    Muslim, just like their kin south of the border. Due to strong
    geographic, historical, religious and cultural affinity, Iran has
    a strong ability to influence its small neighbor by exporting its
    religious ideology.

    Despite these facts, since attaining independence in 1991,
    Azerbaijan, which in 1918 became also known as the world's first
    secular predominantly Muslim republic, has enjoyed strong ties with
    both the United States and Israel. Azerbaijanis are very keen on hopes
    of eventual integration with Western economic and security structures.

    Disappointment over one-sided U.S. foreign policy, driven solely
    by limited Armenian ethnic interests, may diminish Azerbaijan's
    pro-Western drive and increase Iran's influence in this sensitive
    region. Not to mention that a bias in the Armenian-Azerbaijani
    conflict harms U.S. position of an impartial mediator and weakens
    Azerbaijani confidence in the sincerity of U.S. support for their
    fledgling democracy.

    As the result of conflict during the 1988-1994 period, serious material
    damage has been inflicted, currently at $22 billion dollars.

    Overall area of the occupied territories of the Republic of Azerbaijan
    is 17,000 sq.km (10,563 sq.miles). Occupied regions of Azerbaijan
    have been totally destroyed and robbed; more than 877 settlements
    have been burned and destroyed. Over 30,000 people were killed,
    more than 568,000 people from western regions of Azerbaijan under
    Armenian occupation since 1993, including 42,072 from Nagorno-Karabakh,
    remained displaced within the country.

    .

    Being the co-chair to the OSCE Minsk group and a country with a
    multi-tiered economic and political relationship, the US should be more
    proactive in conflict resolution. As the country which introduced
    and supported the Baker Rules, the US should also be proactive
    in enforcement of the negotiation format where the Azerbaijani and
    Armenian communities of Karabakh are recognized as interested parties,
    which means the leadership of Azerbaijan community of Karabakh should
    be brought into negotiation and visited every time the co-chair visits
    the region.

    I join Azerbaijani- and Turkic-Americans, members of the Pax Turcica
    Institute, to express my disappointment over foreign ethnic agenda
    disgracefully tainting our national interests and to urge a prompt
    White House nomination and Senate confirmation of U.S. Ambassador
    to Azerbaijan.

    Jamila Scheve grew up and lived most of her life in Azerbaijan,
    a former Soviet republic. After earning a Ph.D in Literature in the
    former Soviet Union, she taught at the University of Foreign Languages
    in her native country. She became a U.S. citizen in 2009 and now lives
    in Anchorage. She is an activist of the Azerbaijani-American Council.

    The views expressed here are the writer's own and are not necessarily
    endorsed by Alaska Dispatch. Alaska Dispatch welcomes a broad
    range of viewpoints. To submit a piece for consideration, e-mail
    commentary(at)alaskadispatch.com.

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