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Breaking News: The WAR of the words Just Started between U.S. and Russia over Chemical Weapon

April 11, 2017 By administrator

President Trump at a meeting in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on Tuesday. Credit Stephen Crowley/The New York Times

WASHINGTON — The White House on Tuesday accused the Russian government of engaging in a cover-up of the chemical weapons attack last week by Syrian forces that prompted American airstrikes, saying that United States intelligence and numerous contemporaneous reports confirmed that the Syrians used sarin gas on their own people.

In a declassified four-page report that details United States intelligence on the chemical weapons attack, the White House asserted that the Syrian and Russian governments have sought to confuse the world community about the assault through disinformation and “false narratives.”

Senior White House officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the government’s view, said Russia’s goal was to cover up Syrian regime culpability.

The officials said they could not comment on the possibility that the Russian government knew in advance of Syria’s plan to carry out the chemical weapons attack, or of a subsequent attack on a hospital that was treating victims.

But one official said that, given the history of close cooperation between the Syrian and Russian militaries, Moscow must answer for the attacks. Pentagon officials have said that Russian personnel were at the Syrian base used to launch the chemical weapons attack.

Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/11/world/middleeast/russia-syria-chemical-weapons-white-house.html?emc=edit_na_20170411&nl=breaking-news&nlid=49769097&ref=cta&_r=0

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Russia, U.S, war

US missile strike in Syria: What is known so far about target, victims & reactions

April 7, 2017 By administrator

Syrian army airbase that was hit by a U.S. strike near the city of Homs, Syria, 7 April, 2017. © Mikhail Voskresensky / Sputnik

The US launched a missile strike on a Syrian airbase, killing at least six people, including civilians, and wounding several others. Reactions to the operation continue to roll in, with Russia condemning it while EU countries and others express support.

US President Donald Trump ordered the military strike on an airfield in Shayrat, near Homs, which resulted in a Friday pre-dawn strike in which 59 Tomahawk missiles were deployed.

Six MiG-23 fighter jets were destroyed in the operation, along with a material storage depot, a training facility, a canteen and a radar station, according to Russia’s Ministry of Defense (MoD).

However, the airfield’s runway remained intact, according to the MoD, which described the operation’s efficiency as “quite poor.”

Syrian officials have so far confirmed that six people were killed and several others wounded in the operation.

However, the governor of Homs told RT that at least five people had been killed, three of whom were Syrian soldiers. He also stated that at least seven people had been wounded.

Meanwhile, Syria’s SANA news agency has reported nine civilian deaths, including four children.

Global reaction

The office of Syrian President Bashar Assad called the US strike “reckless”,“irresponsible” and “shortsighted,” claiming the motives the strike weren’t based on true facts.

However, the airfield’s runway remained intact, according to the MoD, which described the operation’s efficiency as “quite poor.”

Syrian officials have so far confirmed that six people were killed and several others wounded in the operation.

However, the governor of Homs told RT that at least five people had been killed, three of whom were Syrian soldiers. He also stated that at least seven people had been wounded.

Meanwhile, Syria’s SANA news agency has reported nine civilian deaths, including four children.

Global reaction

The office of Syrian President Bashar Assad called the US strike “reckless”,“irresponsible” and “shortsighted,” claiming the motives the strike weren’t based on true facts.

source: https://www.rt.com/news/383895-us-airstrike-syria-reactions/

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: airstrike, Syria, U.S

U.S. Arrests Top senior executive of Turkey’s largest state-owned banks in Iran Sanctions Probe

March 29, 2017 By administrator

by Isobel Finkel and Christian Berthelsen

March 28, 2017, 9:01 AM PDT March 29, 2017, 1:17 AM PDT

(bloomberg) A senior executive at one of Turkey’s largest state-owned banks was arrested in the U.S. on charges of conspiring to evade trade sanctions on Iran, escalating a case that has prompted diplomatic tensions and political maneuvering between the two countries.

Mehmet Hakan Atilla, a deputy chief executive officer at Turkiye Halk Bankasi AS, is accused of conspiring with Reza Zarrab, an Iranian-Turkish gold trader, to launder hundreds of millions of dollars through the U.S. financial system on behalf of Iran and its companies.

Atilla was taken into custody Monday night, a prosecutor told a magistrate judge at a hearing on Tuesday. Atilla didn’t enter a plea or make any statements during the brief court appearance and was ordered held without bail. The bank’s shares plummeted on Tuesday in Istanbul.

Zarrab has close ties to the administration of Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who raised the banker’s arrest with former U.S. Vice President Joe Biden last year and accused the U.S. of ulterior motives in bringing the case.

Atilla’s detention comes at a delicate time in U.S.-Turkish relations. Turkey is historically one of the West’s strongest allies in the Middle East. But Zarrab’s arrest and divergent strategies over Syria’s civil war and its fallout have raised tensions between U.S. and Turkey.

Turkey’s economic minister, Nihat Zeybekci, criticized the way U.S. arrested Atilla.

“At the very least, if there was a situation like this, they could have shared it with Turkey in advance,” Zeybekci said in an interview with Bloomberg. The banker “could have been invited to testify,” he said.

Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said he’ll raise the issue in a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in Turkey on Thursday.

Halkbank said in a public filing to the Istanbul stock market on Wednesday that it had launched an investigation in conjunction with Turkish authorities and that information about the case would be shared with the public as it becomes available. Halkbank shares sank 11 percent as of 9:55 a.m. in Istanbul, the biggest decline since July 18 on heavy volume.

Lira Slumps

The Turkish lira weakened as much as 1.2 percent against the U.S. dollar following news of the arrest.

Atilla is accused of protecting and hiding Zarrab’s ability to provide access to international financial networks, according to the complaint filed in the U.S. Zarrab is suspected of providing gold and currency to Iran through the bank, while creating false documents to make the transactions appear to be food so they would fall within humanitarian exceptions to the sanctions law, according to the court papers.

The U.S. relies on wiretapped conversations involving Zarrab, Atilla and several informants, who aren’t named, to support its case against the banker, including Zarrab’s reference to the allegedly fake food shipments.

“Do you know what’s stirring the pot?” Zarrab asked one of the confidential informants in a 2013 phone conversation, according to the U.S. “The document you turned in. They wrote Dubai as the origin of the wheat. The man says wheat doesn’t grow in Dubai.”

Zarrab’s Lawyers

Zarrab has hired almost 20 of New York’s elite white-collar criminal defense lawyers to represent him — including former New York Mayor and U.S. Attorney Rudy Giuliani, and Michael B. Mukasey, the former U.S. attorney general. On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Richard Berman scheduled a hearing for April 4 and asked defense lawyers to explain Giuliani and Mukasey’s role in the case.

Prosecutors claimed the hiring of Giuliani and Mukasey might present a conflict of interest because their firms also represent some of the banks alleged to be victims in Zarrab’s case.

Mukasey’s son, Marc, has been widely speculated as a candidate to become the New York U.S. Attorney under Trump, after the firing of Preet Bharara earlier this month. Prosecutors said in a court filing Monday that Giuliani and Mukasey were hired to try to reach a settlement in the case, though neither will be involved in court proceedings.

Bharara led the investigations of Zarrab and Atilla. His firing brought relief to members of the Turkish government and caused a jump in the shares of Halkbank. Cavusoglu on Wednesday accused Bharara of ties to Fethullah Gulen, a U.S.-based preacher Erdogan accuses of orchestrating the failed July 15 coup.

Royal Holdings

Zarrab, owner and operator of Royal Holdings A.S., is accused of using his multibillion-dollar network of companies in Turkey and the United Arab Emirates to induce U.S. banks to process transactions for Iran’s benefit.

The U.S. has said it has evidence that Zarrab paid millions of dollars in bribes to Turkish government officials and top executives at Halkbank, which allegedly helped Zarrab process the payments.

Zarrab was a key figure in a 2013 scandal, in which Turkish prosecutors accused him of bribing the country’s cabinet ministers in a gold-trading operation worth at least $12 billion, a charge he denied. Erdogan called the investigation a coup attempt, and all charges against Zarrab and members of his administration were eventually dropped.

Suleyman Aslan, the former CEO of Halkbank, was among dozens arrested as part of a December 2013 probe into gold smuggling, money laundering and bribery in government tenders. Aslan was taken into custody after police raided his home and found $4.5 million stuffed into shoe boxes — money the CEO said was intended as “charitable donations.”

He was later released and charges were dropped, as they were against all the suspects. The prosecutors who brought the charges were either arrested, sacked or fled. While there were no charges against Atilla at the time, Turkish prosecutors cited transcripts of his conversations with Zarrab as evidence against him.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: arrests, Banker, Turkish, U.S

Armenia citizen’s son to be appointed US ambassador to Russia

March 10, 2017 By administrator

Republican Party member Jon Huntsman Jr. has agreed to become the new United States ambassador to Russia, informed the US media.

A respective official statement, however, has not yet been made either from the administration of US President Donald Trump, or Huntsman himself.

The Huntsman family business has been linked to Russia and the other former USSR countries ever since the devastating earthquake that hit Armenia in 1988.

Renowned American businessman and philanthropist Jon Huntsman Sr. was bestowed two state awards of Armenia and was granted Armenian citizenship, in recognition of his investments to the country.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Ambassador, huntsman-jr, Russia, U.S

US State Department: Women, children, national and sexual minorities face discrimination and violence in Azerbaijan

March 7, 2017 By administrator

On September 26, 2016, constitutional amendments were approved in Azerbaijan that, inter alia, increased the president’s term in office from five to seven years and expanded the powers of the president. The constitutional referendum was marked by widespread credible complaints of irregularities, US State Department’s Human Rights Reports for 2016 reads.

According to the report, the Azerbaijani aauthorities limited the freedoms of expression, assembly, and association through intimidation, incarceration on questionable charges, and harsh abuse of selected activists and secular and religious opposition figures. The operating space for activists and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) remained severely constrained. There was a continuing crackdown on civil society.
Government use of the judicial system to punish dissent. Authorities used different pretexts to decrease the number of defense lawyers willing and able to defend the rights of peaceful activists.

Other problems reported included physical abuse in the military; alleged torture and abuse of detainees, at times leading to death; police violence against peaceful citizens; abuse of inmates in prisons; harsh and sometimes life-threatening prison conditions; detentions without warrants; and incommunicado detention.
Interviewees “described having a gun pointed at their head, severe beatings, sometimes lasting several hours, verbal abuse and psychological pressure, practices such as standing on one’s knees for long hours, threats of physical and sexual abuse as well as threats to arrest family members.”

It is noted that during the trial of 17 of the individuals, Taleh Bagirzade and 16 other Nardaran residents charged in the case informed the court they were tortured while police interrogated them at the Ministry of Internal Affairs’ Organized Crime Department. In another prominent case, imprisoned N!DA youth movement activists Bayram Mammadov and Giyas Ibrahimov stated during their trial that police subjected them to torture while in custody. The two youths claimed that officers beat them, forced them to disrobe, and threatened to rape them with truncheons and bottles if they did not confess to charges of drug possession after closed-circuit television footage showed them painting graffiti on a statue of former president Heydar Aliyev.

Prison conditions were sometimes harsh and potentially life threatening due to overcrowding, inadequate nutrition, deficient heating and ventilation, and poor medical care. Former prisoners and family members of imprisoned activists reported that prisoners often had to pay bribes to use toilets or shower rooms or to receive food.

It is highlighted that impunity remained a problem. On May 25, the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Arrests expressed concern about the conditions in the special facilities for persons with disabilities and over the ongoing prosecution of human rights defenders, journalists, and political opposition. In one of the more prominent examples of arbitrary arrest during the year, according to activists, authorities detained 185 individuals prior to, during, and after authorized rallies held on September 11, 17, and 18 in opposition to the September 26 referendum on amending the constitution.

Low wages contributed to corruption throughout the country.

Authorities often made arrests based on spurious charges such as resisting police, illegal possession of drugs or weapons, tax evasion, illegal entrepreneurship, abuse of authority, or inciting public disorder.
On March 18, the president Ilham Aliyev pardoned 148 prisoners. NGOs considered 14 to have been political prisoners. There were reports that authorities pressed some of the released prisoners to write letters seeking forgiveness for past “mistakes” as a condition of their pardon. Several prisoners, such as the chair of the opposition REAL movement, Ilgar Mammadov, reported that authorities used physical abuse, placement into isolation cells, assaults by other prisoners, and threats to family members to extract such letters.

It is emphasized in the report that the judiciary remained largely corrupt and inefficient. Courts often failed to investigate allegations of torture and inhumane treatment of detainees in police custody.

Authorities released three others in the spring: journalists Rauf Mirkadirov and Khadija Ismayilova, and defense lawyer Intigam Aliyev. Despite the release of these 17 individuals, local NGO activists estimated the number of political prisoners and detainees to range from 119 to 160.

According to the authors of the report, journalists faced intimidation and at times were beaten and imprisoned. NGOs considered at least six journalists and bloggers to be political prisoners or detainees as of year’s end. During the year authorities continued pressure on media, journalists in exile, and their relatives.

In August, activists who were arrested were secular democratic opposition figures, although authorities cited alleged ties to Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, who was accused by Turkey of having organized the failed July 15 coup attempt there, to justify some of the arrests. Activists whose arrests were based on such alleged ties included Fuad Ahmadli of the opposition Popular Front Party, and Faiq Amirov, the financial director of opposition newspaper Azadliq, who was also the assistant to Popular Front Party chair Ali Kerimli.|

On July 29, the Baku Court of Appeals revoked the license of the semi-independent privately owned ANS television station based on a lawsuit filed by the National Television and Radio Council (NTRC). The lawsuit was initiated after ANS announced its intention to air an interview with exiled Turkish religious figure Fethullah Gulen and Turkish authorities protested the planned broadcast after accusing Gulen of plotting the July 15 coup attempt in Turkey.

Foreign services, including Voice of America, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL), and the BBC, remained prohibited from broadcasting on FM radio frequencies.

Authorities continued the criminal case against Meydan TV initiated in August 2015. The Prosecutor General’s Office investigated more than 15 individuals in the case for alleged illegal entrepreneurship, tax evasion, and abuse of power.

The majority of independent and opposition newspapers remained in a precarious financial situation.
The law imposes criminal penalties for conviction of libel and insult on the internet. On November 29, the Milli Mejlis passed new articles to the criminal code that expand those penalties. Article 148-1, stipulates fines of from 1,000 to 1,500 manat ($556 to $833), or public works from 360 to 480 hours, or corrective work up to two years or one year imprisonment for insults and slander through using fake web nicknames or Internet profiles. A second new provision, Article 323, stipulates fines from 1,000 up to 1,500 manat ($556 to $833) or imprisonment up to three years for insulting the honor and dignity of the president.

The authors of the report also cover violence and discrimination against women in Azerbaijan.
Traditional social norms and lagging economic development in rural regions restricted women’s roles in the economy, and there were reports women had difficulty exercising their legal rights due to gender discrimination.

Rape is illegal and carries a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison. During the year, the Ministry of Internal Affairs reported 31 cases of rape and 62 cases of violence of a sexual nature. The ministry stated that 54 persons had been brought to trial for these offenses.

Violence against children, who are forced to engage in prostitution, and early marriages are also widespread.
Citizens of Armenian descent reported discrimination in employment. Some groups reported sporadic incidents of discrimination, restrictions on their ability to teach in their native languages, and harassment by local authorities. These groups included Talysh in the south, Lezghi in the north, and Meskhetians and Kurds.
Societal intolerance, violence, and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity remained a problem. A local NGO reported that there were numerous incidents of police brutality against individuals based on sexual orientation and noted that authorities did not investigate or punish those responsible. There were also reports of family-based violence against LGBTI individuals and hostile Facebook postings on personal online accounts. A local organization reported that in the first eight months of the year, one gay and two transgender persons were killed and one transvestite committed suicide. In October media reported an attack on a group of LGBTI persons in the Baku City metro.

 

Source Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, discrimination, Minorities, U.S

Armenian Election Update: Armenia’s YELK bloc members meet U.S. ambassador ahead of elections

March 7, 2017 By administrator

>Members of YELK bloc Aram Sargsyan, Edmon Marukyan, Artak Zeynalyan and Alen Simonyan on Monday, March 6 met the U.S. ambassador to Armenia Richard M. Mills.

At the meeting, a number of issues concerning the upcoming parliamentary elections were discussed.

A total of nine parties and alliances are participating in elections to the National Assembly, slated for April 2.

The sides dwelled upon the launch of election campaign and other political issues.

Ambassador Mills said it is important to have Armenian voters believe that their voice counts.

“I join you to refute rumors suggesting that video cameras and identification technology have been installed in polling stations to track how people vote,” he said.

“I urge all Armenians to go to the polls on April 2 for the sake of the country’s future.”

Read also:Armenia elections: YELQ program taps army reform, EU association

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Election, U.S, yelk

Report: US deploys force in Manbij as ‘visible sign of deterrence’ – Pentagon

March 6, 2017 By administrator

A small number of US troops were sent to the northern Syrian town of Manbij to deter conflict between the US-backed Kurdish forces and Turkey-backed rebels, the Pentagon has confirmed. Syrian troops have also moved into the area to serve as a buffer.

US troops were first spotted in Manbij on Saturday, following the reports of a deal between the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces and the Syrian government to hand over some 20 villages in a zone between Manbij and Al-Bab, recently taken by Turkish-backed forces.

“They are certainly aware of where we are, and we are aware of where they are. There is no intention between the two of there being any conflict against any party other than ISIS [Islamic State],” Pentagon spokesman Captain Jeff Davis told reporters, referring to the US and Syrian forces.

The US-backed SDF is mostly comprised of Kurdish militia, considered terrorists by Turkey. Washington has cultivated the SDF as a proxy force on the ground against Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) independent of the Syrian army, which is supported by Russia and Iran.

https://youtu.be/WQs-7khZ9nc

US troops were sent to Manbij after “the increase in Turkish treats to occupy the city,” Sharfan Darwish, spokesman for the Manbij Military Council, told Reuters. Turkish-backed forces have clashed with SDF troops west of Manbij over the weekend and even on Monday, Darwish confirmed.

Last week, the US-backed group struck a deal with Russia to turn over up to 20 villages west of Manbij to the Syrian army, creating a buffer zone between the Kurdish-dominated militia and the Turks. While implementation of the deal has been delayed, five villages were handed over on Monday, Darwish said.

SDF forces liberated Manbij from IS in August 2016, just days before Ankara announced “Operation Euphrates Shield.” Turkish-backed Syrian rebels, along with Turkish armor and artillery, have since pushed IS back and captured the key stronghold of Al-Bab, only to see further advance checked by Syrian government troops that linked up with the SDF south of the city.

US presence in the area was intended to keep all groups focused on fighting IS, the Pentagon said on Monday.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: deploys, force, manbij, Syria, U.S

U.S. forces look on as Turks, Kurds clash in north Syria

March 4, 2017 By administrator

MANBIJ, Syria— US soldiers aboard Humvee armoured vehicles have been watching from a distance as two of their allies, Turkish-backed forces and a Kurdish-led alliance, battle it out for control of Manbij in Syrian Kurdistan (northern Syria).

An AFP correspondent on Friday saw the American soldiers on patrol north of the city of Manbij, just miles from the fierce clashes taking place further west.

Turkish forces and allied Syrian rebels have tried since Wednesday to capture Manbij, a former bastion of the Islamic State group, now under the control of the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) alliance.

The SDF is dominated by fighters known as the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) which Ankara brands as “terrorists”.

On August 24, 2016, Turkey, along with the Free Syrian Army, launched an incursion into northern Syria, east of Afrin canton to stop the US-backed Kurdish YPG forces from extending areas under their control and connecting Syrian Kurdistan’s Kobani and Hasaka in the east with Afrin canton in the west.

Turkey-backed forces also also focused on cleaning the area in northern Syria from the Islamic State (IS) and have captured a number of towns from IS jihadists, including Al-Bab near the Turkish border.

Turkey fears the creation of an autonomous Kurdish region in Syrian Kurdistan — similar to the Kurdish region in Iraqi Kurdistan — would spur the separatist ambitions of Turkey’s own Kurds.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan this week said the next target would be Manbij, in Aleppo province.

And on Thursday, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu threatened to strike the YPG unless they pull out of the northern city.

The SDF is dominated by fighters known as the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) which Ankara brands as “terrorists”.

On August 24, 2016, Turkey, along with the Free Syrian Army, launched an incursion into northern Syria, east of Afrin canton to stop the US-backed Kurdish YPG forces from extending areas under their control and connecting Syrian Kurdistan’s Kobani and Hasaka in the east with Afrin canton in the west.

Turkey-backed forces also also focused on cleaning the area in northern Syria from the Islamic State (IS) and have captured a number of towns from IS jihadists, including Al-Bab near the Turkish border.

Turkey fears the creation of an autonomous Kurdish region in Syrian Kurdistan — similar to the Kurdish region in Iraqi Kurdistan — would spur the separatist ambitions of Turkey’s own Kurds.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan this week said the next target would be Manbij, in Aleppo province.

And on Thursday, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu threatened to strike the YPG unless they pull out of the northern city.

But Votel’s spokesman, Colonel John Thomas, said that, while the general supported a peaceful transition of Manbij to a “thriving city”, he did not say if the US would stop any Turkish move towards it.

The United States has special operations forces advising the SDF on the ground in Syria, but no combat units.

Sherfan Darwish, spokesman of the Manbij Military Council which is part of the SDF, tried to play down the absence of US forces in Manbij.

“The coalition is on patrol along the Sarjur river (north of Manbij) and there is coordination with the coalition at the highest level,” Darwish told AFP.

“All our fighters in Manbij were trained by the Americans,” he added.

Syrian Kurdistan’s ruling PYD has established three autonomous zones, or Cantons of Jazeera, Kobani and Afrin and a Kurdish government across Syrian Kurdistan in 2013. On March 17, 2016 Syria’s Kurds declared a federal region in Syrian Kurdistan. On Dec. 30, 2016 Syrian Kurds approved a blueprint for a system of federal government in Syrian Kurdistan, reaffirming their plans for autonomy in areas they have controlled during the civil war.

Source: http://ekurd.net/us-forces-turks-kurds-syria-2017-03-04

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: clash, Kurd, Syria, Turkey, U.S

Armenian Prime Minister and U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Discuss Anti-Corruption Campaign

February 12, 2017 By administrator

Armenian Prime Minister Karen Karapetyan and U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Richard Mills discussed possible ways to fight corruption in Armenia during a meeting in Yerevan on February 10.

Karapetyan gave details of several draft laws aimed at improving the effectiveness of anticorruption actions and mechanisms, introducing new procedures, which may help reduce corruption risks in all areas.

“In terms of achieving consistency in the fight against corruption, I believe it crucial to ensure the public’s proactive civil position, provide a stronger Government-society feedback and build on constructive cooperation with partner organizations. I would like to emphasize once again that my government is open to discussion and proposals,” Karen Karapetyan said.

The discussion follows a February 6 vote by Armenia’s parliament to deny debate on a bill that would require top government officials to specify the sources of income in their annual financial disclosures.

According to a government press release, the U.S. Ambassador welcomed the Prime Minister’s public statements and actions in this regard. Noting that there is still much to be done in this field, Richard Mills said his country’s authorities ready to support the Government’s anticorruption effort through their own resources.

“You may rest assured of the United States’ commitment to supporting Armenia’s anti-corruption program. We are prepared to work with all those state structures firmly determined to combat corruption,” the ambassador said.

At Richard Mills’ request, Karen Karapetyan briefed the ambassador on the goals and targets set before the independent preventive anticorruption body to be established under the Senior Officials’ Ethics Committee.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ambassador, armenian PM, U.S

New petition seeks to strengthen U.S.-Armenia economic relationship

February 3, 2017 By administrator

The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) has launched a petition, urging the Congress to work with the Administration to boost U.S.–Armenia trade and investment.

A historic U.S.-Armenia Trade and Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA) – a bilateral blueprint for the expansion of U.S.-Armenia economic relations – was signed in 2015, ANCA reminds.

In the petition, the Committee calls on the public to help build on that framework by asking their U.S. Senate and House Members to work actively on three key U.S.-Armenia economic priorities:

— Encourage the Treasury Secretary to initiate negotiations toward a U.S.-Armenia Tax Treaty, a base-line accord among friendly economic partners that would eliminate the threat of double taxation of firms operating in both jurisdictions;

— Encourage the leadership of the Millennium Challenge Corporation to extend an education-oriented grant to Armenia supporting Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) programs in public schools.

— Encourage the Transportation Secretary to support commercially viable direct flights between the United States and Armenia, starting with Los Angeles to Yerevan connections.

Read also:Two U.S. firms to invest more than $500 mln in Armenia

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenia, petition, U.S

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