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U.S. Official Hails Armenian Poll Conduct

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  • U.S. Official Hails Armenian Poll Conduct

    U.S. OFFICIAL HAILS ARMENIAN POLL CONDUCT
    By Anna Saghabalian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    July 30 2007

    A visiting senior U.S. official on Monday praised the Armenian
    government's conduct of recent parliamentary elections and expressed
    hope that it will bolster Armenia's ties with the West.

    Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza described the
    May 12 vote as the most democratic in the country's history after
    holding talks with President Robert Kocharian and leaders of the main
    Armenian parties.

    "I would like to recognize and congratulate Armenia for its success
    in holding what appears to be the freest and fairest election in this
    phase of Armenia's independence," Bryza told reporters, echoing the
    findings of Western election observers.

    "These elections were a real step forward in the development of
    democracy in Armenia," he said. "These elections brought the Armenian
    electoral process closer to international standards than any previous
    election. But there is still some room to go."

    Bryza said democratic reform featured large during the talks along
    with discussions on the current state of Armenia's relationship
    with the United States and Western security structures. He welcomed
    recent years' increase in the defense and security component of that
    relationship, saying he hopes it will deepen further despite Yerevan's
    close ties with Russia.

    "We need to build on that foundation of security cooperation, to
    the extent that Armenia wishes, to energize those ties between the
    Euro-Atlantic community and Armenia, even as Armenia maintains strong
    and, we hope, very warm relations with Russia," Bryza said. "We don't
    want Armenia to choose either the Euro-Atlantic community, or Russia.

    We want Armenia to choose both of them at the same time."

    A statement by Kocharian's office gave few details of his talks with
    the U.S. official which took place in the Armenian president's summer
    retreat on Lake Sevan. It said only that the two men discussed "issues
    relating to the current phase of negotiations on the settlement of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict."

    Bryza, who is also the U.S. co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group,
    confirmed that Karabakh was also on the agenda. He said he will
    proceed to Moscow late Wednesday for two-day consultations with the
    group's two other co-chairs representing France and Russia.

    In a joint statement earlier this month, the three mediators expressed
    their disappointment with Kocharian's and Azerbaijani President Ilham
    Aliev's failure last month to iron out their "remaining differences"
    over a framework peace accord put forward by the Minsk Group. They
    urged the two leaders to meet again "in the coming months" and again
    try to achieve a breakthrough before the start of campaigning for
    presidential elections due in both Armenia and Azerbaijan next year.

    Bryza indicated on Monday that this is unlikely to happen not only
    because of the approaching elections but the ongoing international
    talks on the status of Kosovo that look set to result in international
    recognition of the Albanian-populated territory's secession from
    Serbia.

    "I do sense that the political climate here is shifting its focus
    toward the elections," he said. "I sensed that in my own discussions
    on Nagorno-Karabakh. I sense also that everybody involved with Karabakh
    ... is wondering whether or not the Kosovo process will have an impact
    on Karabakh."

    "So maybe the leaders are going to decide that they want to themselves
    take some time to think things through and get a better feel for how
    the political situations play out over the next few months," he added.
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