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Schiff Seeks To Stop Military Aid To Baku

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  • Schiff Seeks To Stop Military Aid To Baku

    SCHIFF SEEKS TO STOP MILITARY AID TO BAKU

    asbarez
    Tuesday, December 4th, 2012

    Rep. Adam Schiff

    WASHINGTON-Representative Adam Schiff (D-CA), a senior member of
    the House Appropriations Committee, on Tuesday called on his House
    and Senate colleagues to cut all security assistance to Azerbaijan,
    reported the Armenian National Committee of America.

    His request comes in the wake of the continuing scandal surrounding
    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev's pardon and promotion of Ramil
    Safarov, a confessed axe-murderer who killed an Armenian officer while
    he slept during a 2004 NATO Partnership for Peace training exercise
    in Hungary.

    "We join with Congressman Schiff in opposing U.S. taxpayer subsidies
    to an openly aggressive Azerbaijani regime that makes heroes of
    racist murderers, and unapologetically threatens to use every military
    resource at its disposal to renew its aggression against both Artsakh
    and Armenia," said Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the ANCA. "If
    the Safarov scandal has taught us anything, it's that, rather than
    funding and arming the Azerbaijani military, the U.S. government
    should be using the full measure of America's geo-political leverage
    to block Baku's drive to plunge the entire Caucasus back into war."

    Representative Schiff's request, which he sent in letters to Senators
    Patrick Leahy and Lindsey Graham, and Representatives Kay Granger and
    Nita Lowey, the Chairs and Ranking Members of the State and Foreign
    Operations Subcommittees in the Senate and House, made the case that:
    "Azerbaijan has committed the most terrible subversion of justice -
    making a hero of a cold-blooded killer. Plainly the investment we
    have made in training Azeri forces has been worse than wasted. The
    United States must not tolerate any acts of aggression against
    Armenia or Nagorno-Karabakh, and this hateful action by President
    Aliyev undermines all international efforts to bring about a peaceful
    solution in the region."

    Congressman Schiff also emphasized, in his letter, that: "Azerbaijan
    must pay a high price for its actions. Baku treasures the security
    assistance that it receives from Washington, not because it needs the
    money (it does not), but because it signifies a certain closeness in
    the bilateral relationship. By cutting off military aid to Azerbaijan,
    the United States would signal its disgust with the Safarov affair,
    while also reminding Aliyev that the United States will not tolerate
    any acts of aggression against Armenia or Nagorno-Karabakh."

    The ANCA, in testimony presented to House Appropriators this March
    and in many other settings, has long been on record opposing any and
    all military aid to the Azerbaijani government, both prior to and
    after the Safarov scandal.

    The complete text of letter Congressman's Schiff's sent to the Chairmen
    and Ranking Members is provided below:

    Dear Chairmen Leahy and Granger and Ranking Members Graham and Lowey:

    As you continue work on the 2013 State, Foreign Operations and Related
    Programs appropriations bill, I urge you to cut all security assistance
    to Azerbaijan, including Azerbaijan's IMET funding, in response to the
    egregious repatriation and release of Ramil Safarov, an Azerbaijani
    army captain who had confessed to the savage 2004 axe murder of
    Armenian army lieutenant Gurgen Margaryan, while the latter slept. At
    the time, the two were participating in a NATO Partnership for Peace
    exercise in Budapest, Hungary. After the murder, Safarov was sentenced
    to life in prison by a Hungarian court and imprisoned in Hungary.

    On August 31, Safarov was sent home to Azerbaijan, purportedly to
    serve out the remainder of his sentence. Instead of prison, he was
    greeted as a hero by the Azeri government and promenaded through the
    streets of Baku carrying a bouquet of roses. President Ilham Aliyev
    immediately pardoned Safarov and he was promoted to the rank of major
    and given a new apartment and eight years of back pay.

    The Aliyev government's rapturous welcome for Safarov in Baku exposes
    a fundamental contempt for the rule of law that is the underpinning
    of any state that aspires to greater integration into Euro-Atlantic
    institutions. It also further poisons relations between Azerbaijan and
    Armenia over the ethnic Armenian territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. The
    OSCE's Minsk Group (United States, Russia and France) has been trying
    to work with the parties to fashion a settlement to a crisis that
    threatens to plunge the Caucasus into war. That effort, already
    difficult because of years of repeated sniping incidents by Azeri
    forces, as well as a stream of bellicose statements from Baku, is
    now even more challenging.

    Azerbaijan must pay a high price for its actions. Baku treasures the
    security assistance that it receives from Washington, not because
    it needs the money (it does not), but because it signifies a certain
    closeness in the bilateral relationship. By cutting off military aid to
    Azerbaijan, the United States would signal its disgust with the Safarov
    affair, while also reminding Aliyev that the United States will not
    tolerate any acts of aggression against Armenia or Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Furthermore, the United States should immediately suspend all
    IMET activities with Azerbaijan. According to the Defense Security
    Cooperation Agency, which oversees IMET, the program has two aims:

    - To further the goal of regional stability through effective,
    mutually beneficial military-to-military relations which culminate
    in increased understanding and defense cooperation between the United
    States and foreign countries; and

    - To increase the ability of foreign national military and civilian
    personnel to absorb and maintain basic democratic values and protect
    internationally recognized human rights.

    Azerbaijan's actions in pardoning, parading and promoting an
    axe-murderer like Safarov clearly indicate that our investment there
    in IMET has been an abject failure. The funding, training and support
    has plainly not fostered either regional stability or the absorption
    of democratic values and a respect for human rights.

    I would be happy to discuss this issue further with you or your staff,
    but we cannot continue to embrace a government and a military that
    operates at cross-purposes to our own interests and in violation of
    the most basic norms of international behavior.

    Sincerely,

    [signed] Adam Schiff Member of Congress



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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