Times of Israel: Armenian-American lobby has successfully provided cover for Armenia

  27 October 2014    Read: 821
Times of Israel: Armenian-American lobby has successfully provided cover for Armenia
An article titled `Armenian-American lobby is powerful, despite overt support of Iran, Russia and opposition to Israel Russia` has been published in The Times of Israel.

The article by former editor-in-chief of the Baltimore Jewish Times Maayan Jaffe reads:

“The Armenian Congressional Caucus claims 88 members of Congress, which means that the Armenian-American lobby can count on these elected officials not just for their votes, but to push for the Armenian agenda on the House and Senate floors.

Like other significant lobbying forces, the Armenian-American lobby is not made up of a single group, but of a network of organizations, acting in concert. These groups include the Armenian American Political Action Committee, the Armenian National Committee of America and The Armenian Assembly of America. They are bolstered by a network of local and state organizations, which are also heavily involved in the political process — many times oddly in the realm of U.S. foreign policy, a place in which they have no expertise or business.

Armenia’s interests are not in line with those of the U.S. Disturbingly, the Armenian-American lobby has successfully provided cover for Armenia’s strategic relationships with Iran and Russia, countries that no one could mistake as allies of the United States.

In 2010, Wikileaks, the leaked archive of U.S. diplomatic traffic, brought to light that Armenia had sold Iran rockets and machine guns used to kill American military personnel in Iraq. Then Deputy Secretary of State, John D. Negroponte, wrote a strongly worded letter to Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, expressing “deep concerns about Armenia’s transfer of arms to Iran which resulted in the death and injury of U.S. soldiers in Iraq.” The letter goes on to say that “In 2007 some of these weapons were recovered from two Shia militant attacks in which a U.S. soldier was killed and six others were injured in Iraq.”

The established Armenian-American community seems to take Armenia’s relationship with Iran as a given. A September 2014 story in Asbarez, the Los Angeles-based Armenian-American newspaper of record, cites anonymous sources as claiming Armenia’s foe, Azerbaijan, allowed Israeli spy drones to fly into Iranian air space to conduct a reconnaissance mission. The paper states disapprovingly that this revelation implicates “Baku’s involvement in the spying mission. “ The report goes on to call out the Azerbaijan’s government for its “hostility against the Islamic Republic.”
One would think that an Armenian-American newspaper would applaud efforts to undermine Iran’s nuclear program. Instead, the paper condemns Azerbaijan for aiding an alleged espionage effort against Tehran.”

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