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US Announces Major New Aid Package For Armenia

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  • US Announces Major New Aid Package For Armenia

    U.S. ANNOUNCES MAJOR NEW AID PACKAGE FOR ARMENIA
    By Emil Danielyan

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    April 4 2006

    The United States has officially committed itself to providing $235.65
    million in additional economic assistance to Armenia, in a further
    indication of its deepening ties with the South Caucasus country. The
    sum, substantial by Armenian standards, is to be provided over the
    next five years under the Bush administration's Millennium Challenge
    Account (MCA) program aimed at promoting good governance and economic
    reforms around the world.

    The administration included Armenia on the list of 16 developing
    countries eligible for MCA funding when it unveiled the program two
    years ago. The cash-strapped government in Yerevan jumped at the
    opportunity to meet some of its pressing socio-economic needs. The
    MCA compact that was signed by senior U.S. and Armenian officials in
    Washington on March 27 is the product of Yerevan's lengthy negotiations
    with the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), a U.S. government
    agency handling the scheme.

    Speaking at the signing ceremony, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza
    Rice described the agreement as a "testament to the hard work and
    dedication of the Armenian people and their elected government." Rice
    stressed that provision of the aid is conditional on the proper conduct
    by the Armenian authorities of parliamentary and presidential elections
    due in 2007 and 2008 respectively. "These are important commitments
    and the United States stands ready to help Armenia to ensure that
    its upcoming elections are free and fair," she said.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian assured her that his
    government would do its best to honor those commitments. "Our
    task until then is to partner with the United States and European
    governments to implement the necessary corrective steps to improve
    the conditions necessary for an honest and fair expression of people's
    voices," he said.

    The large-scale aid will be channeled into rural regions of Armenia
    that have seen little development despite a decade of nationwide
    economic growth. The main segment, worth $146 million, will be spent
    on upgrading the country's malfunctioning irrigation networks, which
    date to Soviet times. Another $67 million will be used for capital
    repairs of about 1,000 kilometers of battered rural roads. U.S. and
    Armenian officials say these two infrastructure projects will directly
    benefit 75% of the approximately one million Armenians dependent on
    farming. The first major installment of the aid is expected to be
    disbursed early next year.

    Interestingly, Armenia has already been one of the world's leading
    per-capita recipients of U.S. economic assistance, which is approved
    by Congress and has totaled $1.6 billion since 1992. The size of
    this "regular" aid is commonly attributed to the strength of the
    Armenian-American lobby on Capitol Hill. But finding an explanation
    for Armenia's inclusion in MCA, which is single-handedly decided by
    the Bush administration, is a more difficult task. Unlike neighboring
    Georgia (the only other former Soviet state covered by MCA), Armenia
    has no ambition to join NATO and maintains close military and political
    ties with Russia.

    Many Armenian observers regard the promised MCA funds as a further
    incentive for President Robert Kocharian and his most likely successor,
    Defense Minister Serge Sarkisian, to accept a compromise solution
    to the Karabakh conflict. U.S. officials say a framework peace deal
    may still be achieved this year despite the collapse of a crucial
    Armenian-Azerbaijani summit in France last February. In this regard,
    local observers consider very significant Rice's remark that Armenians
    have an "elected government." (The State Department strongly criticized
    the 2003 Armenian presidential and parliamentary elections.) Haykakan
    Zhamanak, a pro-Western Yerevan daily critical of the ruling regime,
    editorialized on April 1 that Washington is thereby "removing all
    questions about Robert Kocharian's legitimacy."

    A commentator for another paper, 168 Zham, went further, speculating
    that the Americans are disinterested in Armenia's democratization
    because "our society is overwhelmingly pro-Russian."

    The United States was quite cautious in criticizing reports of serious
    fraud during last November's constitutional referendum in Armenia
    (and parliamentary elections in Azerbaijan) -- a far cry from its
    tough reaction to the disputed presidential ballot in Belarus on
    March 19. MCC chief executive John Danilovich expressed concern at the
    Armenian authorities' handling of the referendum but promptly lauded
    their "commitment to sustaining the democratic reforms" after receiving
    relevant assurances from Kocharian last January. In a March 27 speech
    at a conference organized by the Armenian Assembly of America,
    U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried said Washington is
    "taking at face value assurances from the Armenian government" that
    the 2007 and 2008 elections will be democratic. Many Armenians are
    far more skeptical on this score.

    By providing extra aid to Armenia Washington may also be rewarding
    the government's ongoing efforts to forge closer security links with
    NATO and America in particular. "We do support Armenia's efforts to
    strengthen its relations with the Euro-Atlantic community," Fried said,
    commending the Kocharian administration for seeking greater "balance in
    its relations with the West and the Russians." Fried's deputy Matthew
    Bryza welcomed "considerable progress made in this regard over the
    past year" after holding talks with Armenian leaders in Yerevan on
    March 7. "I don't think that the government of Armenia can move at
    a pace that for us is too quick," Bryza told a news conference. "But
    we are very happy with the level of cooperation.

    This has been a significant year for U.S.-Armenian security
    cooperation."

    (Haykakan Zhamanak, April 1; 168 Zham, March 30-31; RFE/RL Armenia
    Report, March 7, 28; Text of Daniel Fried's address to the Armenian
    Assembly of America, http://www.state.gov/p/eur/rls/rm/63791.htm)
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