U.S. lawmakers call on State Dept to act against Turkey, Azerbaijan
Sixty U.S. lawmakers have called on State Secretary
Mike Pompeo to take decisive action in condemning Azerbaijan and Turkey over
the clashes in Nagorno-Karabakh that erupted earlier this week, the Armenian
National Committee of America (ANCA) said in a press release on Saturday.
In a letter to Pompeo, representatives Frank
Pallone, Adam Schiff and Jackie Speier along with members of both the Senate
and House of Representatives pressed for an immediate end to U.S. security
assistance to Azerbaijan and called on the Trump administration to immediately
engage with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
for Turkey’s disengagement from the conflict.
Erdoğan has vocalised
Turkey’s firm support for
Azerbaijan, saying his country was ready to do whatever was necessary to eject
Armenian forces from Nagorno-Karabakh. Aside from selling military equipment to
Azerbaijan, Turkey has also supplied Syrian mercenaries to the front lines,
according to Russia, France and independent observers including the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights. Armenia has also repeatedly accused Turkey of
providing Azeri forces with air support. Ankara denies both accusations.
“If Turkey is unwilling to step back from active
engagement in the conflict, then the State Department should immediately
suspend all sales and transfers of military equipment to Ankara,” the lawmakers
wrote. “Given the possibility that this conflict could engulf the region and
draw in other external actors, it is imperative that the U.S. use its
diplomatic leverage to bring about an immediate ceasefire.”
The United States, France and Russia – all co-chairs
of the OSCE Minsk Group set up in 1992 to mediate in the decades-old
Nagorno-Karabakh spat – jointly called for a cessation of hostilities and a
return to negotiations to find a resolution.
The lawmakers
told Pompeo that the ongoing clashes represented “further evidence that the
U.S. policy of equivalence between Armenia and Azerbaijan has failed”.
“For far too long, the United States and other
members of the Minsk Group have drawn a false equivalence between Armenia and
Azerbaijan, even as the latter threatens war and refuses to agree to monitoring
along the line of contact,” they noted.
Ongoing clashes between Armenian and Azeri forces,
which started on Sunday, is the latest flare-up in an ongoing dispute over
Nagorno-Karabakh. The fighting has threatened to expand beyond the breakaway
state that is located within Azerbaijan’s borders but controlled by an ethnic
Armenian majority.
“Armenian Americans and our allies in Congress
demand a stop to the killing, sanctions on Turkey, and an immediate cut-off of
U.S. military aid to Azerbaijan,” said Aram Hamparian, executive director of
the AMCA, an Armenian American political organisation. “Erdoğan
and (Azeri President Ilham) Aliyev – two dictators conspiring to complete
the work of 1915 –
need to be held accountable now.”



