U.S. Primaries and Section 907
It is time for Armenian-American organizations to check with all the U.S. presidential candidates about their views on Armenian issues. Some things can be negotiated but one thing cannot.
No, not the genocide resolution but Section 907 – the ban of U.S. assistance to Azerbaijan that G.W. Bush has been waiving since 2001.
According to Wikipedia:
Section 907 of the United States Freedom Support Act bans any kind of direct United States aid to the Azerbaijani government. This ban makes Azerbaijan the only exception to the countries of the former Soviet Union, to receive direct aid from United States government under the Freedom Support Act to facilitate economic and political stability.[1].
The Act was strongly lobbied for by the Armenian American community in the US[2], and was passed in response to Azerbaijan’s blockade of Armenia. which was at full scale war with Azerbaijan over the predominantly Armenian populated Nagorno Karabakhregion of Azerbaijan. Since 1994 cease-fire agreement Nagorno Karabakh has established a de-facto independent republic, which is not recognized by any country.
On October 24, 2001, the Senate adopted a waiver of section 907 that would provide the President with ability to waiver the Section 07[3]. He has done so since then.
In a sense, American taxpayers have paid for the destruction of the largest medieval Armenian cemetery in the world. The destruction of old Djulfa in December of 2005 was carried out by soldiers of the Azerbaijani army, as seen in film, using heavy technology. This is the same army that the current American administration has been giving money since October of 2001.
Thus, the question posed to all U.S. presidential candidates should be:
Dear candidate, in December of 2005 Azerbaijan’s army reduced to dust world’s largest medieval Armenian cemetery. Since 2001, the current administration has been waiving Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act, legislation that bans military aid to the Republic of Azerbaijan. If elected a president, will you or will you not waive Section 907?
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