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USAPAC on FY 08 budget request

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  • USAPAC on FY 08 budget request

    For Immediate Release

    February 7, 2007

    U.S.-Armenia Public Affairs Committee (USAPAC)
    1518 K Street, NW, Suite M
    Washington, DC 20005
    Contact: Ross Vartian
    Telephone: 202-783-0530


    Administration's Untenable Budget Request for Armenia and
    Azerbaijan

    Washington DC - USAPAC announced its opposition to the massive cut in
    economic assistance to the Republic of Armenia and the asymmetrical
    military aid request in favor of Azerbaijan over Armenia as recently
    proposed in the Administration's Fiscal Year (FY) 2008 budget request.

    "Given Armenia's successful performance in market reforms and
    democratization and the significant role that U.S. bilateral assistance
    has played in making these advances possible, our organization believes
    that Congress will reject the Administration's call for a near fifty
    percent reduction over the previously allocated amount to Armenia,"
    said Executive Director Ross Vartian. "Moreover, it is unfortunate
    that the Administration appears to justify this cut by counting the
    MCA grant against Armenia."

    "Despite numerous rejections by Congress on previous attempts and
    the military parity agreement for Armenia and Azerbaijan made by the
    Administration as part of the waiver for Section 907 of the Freedom
    Support Act, it has again requested an unequal amount of military
    assistance for both countries," stated Vartian.

    The FY 08 budget contains $4.3 million for Azerbaijan and only
    $3 million in Foreign Military Financing (FMF) for Armenia while
    simultaneously calling for $1 million for Azerbaijan compared to
    $300,000 for Armenia in International Military Education and Training
    (IMET) assistance.

    "Once again the Administration has also requested nothing for Nagorno
    Karabakh. Were it not for Congress mandating such assistance since
    1998, Karabakh would be the only area of the South Caucasus precluded
    from U.S. aid. "Congress will once again correct the Administration's
    exclusion of Nagorno Karabakh," predicted Vartian.

    Even more troubling is the fact that this military aid and the
    allocation provided for the Caspian Sea Initiative program can also
    be used against Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh. Azerbaijan's President
    repeatedly boasts that his country's military expenditures will soon
    exceed the total annual budget of Armenia and continues to warn that
    he will launch another war should Azerbaijan's demands not be met in
    the Karabakh negotiating process.

    "Under these circumstances, it is irresponsible for the U.S. to
    propose asymmetrical FMF and IMET funding and also to continue the
    Caspian program," said Vartian. "This in effect enables Azerbaijan's
    destabilizing militarization. Our nation's assistance to Azerbaijan
    would be much better spent on battling corruption and promoting
    economic reform and democracy considering that nation's rankings in the
    annual studies performed by the Heritage Foundation and Transparency
    International."

    "USAPAC will work closely with Congress to increase Armenia's bilateral
    allocation and reinstate military assistance parity," added Vartian.

    Azerbaijan was ranked 107th out of 157 countries in the Heritage
    Foundation/Wall Street Journal's 2007 Index of Economic Freedom.

    Similarly, Azerbaijan was rated

    130th out of 163 nations in the 2006 Corruption Perceptions Index
    conducted by Transparency International.

    As has been previously reported by Bertelsmann Transformation Index and
    a myriad of other news sources and publications, democratic transition
    in Azerbaijan has progressed only marginally. Previous elections,
    including the presidential elections of 1993, 1998 and 2003; and
    parliamentary elections in 1995 and 2000, were rated by Western
    observers as thoroughly undemocratic, have only reinforced existing
    conditions.

    Various committees have begun holding hearings in the House of
    Representatives and Senate to review the Administration's FY 08 budget
    request. The Foreign Operations Subcommittee on Appropriations will
    commence drafting the Foreign Operations spending measures later
    this year.

    The U.S.-Armenia Public Affairs Committee is a 501(c)(4) tax-exempt and
    not-for-profit organization established to advance Armenian-American
    interests.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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