[Congressional Record Volume 169, Number 187 (Monday, November 13, 2023)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5470-S5471]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                         Armenia and Azerbaijan

  Mr. MENENDEZ. Madam President, throughout my more than 30 years in 
Congress, I have pushed our Nation to stand up for human rights around 
the world. Why?
  Because to me it is an essential component of our foreign policy, a 
hallmark of both Democratic and Republican administrations, and a 
cornerstone of American leadership on the international stage.
  Now, some may ask why I do this in the face of pressing global 
challenges. Why speak out for what is right even when it is not 
popular? It is simple. When we guard against genocide, when we prevent 
ethnic cleansing, when we speak out against atrocities, we uphold 
America's standing as a global force for good.
  And we recognize that countries that observe the human rights of its 
people are less likely to create conflict with other countries. 
However, when the United States fails to carry out this responsibility, 
when we turn a blind eye in order to suit other interests, then we do 
irreversible damage to our moral authority and our ability to stand up 
for human rights worldwide.
  Moreover, we allow malign actors like China and Russia, Turkey and 
Iran to fill the void and expand their influence. What I am describing 
isn't some hypothetical scenario--no. In fact, it is happening right 
now.
  As I speak on the Senate floor, the ancient Armenian community of 
Nagorno-Karabakh has been hollowed out by a brutal Azerbaijani regime, 
one that is hell-bent on erasing them off of the map. For months, we 
have seen this humanitarian crisis unfold in slow motion. First, it was 
the Azeri blockade of the Lachin corridor, a blatant violation of the 
2020 ceasefire agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan. As the only 
road in and out of the Karabakh Mountains, Azerbaijan's blockade of 
Lachin corridor effectively cut off the flow of people, food, medicine, 
and basic supplies.
  It went on for months, even as Russian peacekeeping forces--
supposedly there to enforce the ceasefire--stood idly by. In this way, 
Azerbaijan's Government carried out an intention campaign of suffering 
and starvation in Nagorno-Karabakh.
  With the corridor blocked, shelves cleared out. Fuel shortages 
prevented ambulances from responding to emergencies. Rolling blackouts 
kept hospitals from performing basic procedures, and studies found out 
that 1 out of every 3 deaths in the region was from malnutrition alone, 
with children waiting in line for bread in order to feed family members 
who were too weak to leave the house.
  By July, the Azeri Government was denying even the Red Cross from 
access to the region. And in blatant violation of the Geneva 
Conventions, Azerbaijan began detaining medical patients who were being 
transported through the corridor for treatment. Make no mistake, the 
10-month Lachin corridor blockade was part of a diabolic plot to force 
the Armenian enclave to submit. That isn't just my firm belief. It is 
also the conclusion of the former chief prosecutor of the International 
Criminal Court, Luis Moreno Ocampo.
  In a report calling on the global community to recognize the blockade 
as a genocide, he said:

       There are no crematories and no machete attacks. Starvation 
     is the invisible genocide weapon. Without immediate dramatic 
     change, this group of Armenians will be destroyed in a few 
     weeks.


[[Page S5471]]


  He wrote those words on August 8, over 3 months ago. What we have 
seen since then has been nothing short of barbaric. On September 19, 
Azerbaijan launched a full-scale invasion of Nagorno-Karabakh. The next 
day, President Aliyev delivered a televised address from Baku stating 
and speaking of his ``iron fist'' and declaring that ``Karabakh is 
Azerbaijan.''
  It was a harbinger of things to come. After quickly overwhelming 
Armenian forces, the Azeri army seized control of the region and forced 
the local government to capitulate at gunpoint. Azerbaijan pledged to 
respect the rights of ethnic Armenians, but after decades of violence, 
repression, and broken promises, those in harm's way knew better.
  Of the estimated 120,000 residents in the region, which we call 
Artsakh, more than 100,000 fled their ancestral homes. On-the-ground 
reports of this forced exodus are brutal. Buses were packed to the rim 
with refugees clinging to the very few items they could carry. Journeys 
as long as 40 hours were documented on the only mountain road leading 
into Armenia.
  And among the exhausted and suffering Armenian refugees, nearly all 
were deprived of food and medicine as they hurriedly fled their homes. 
The Armenian Health Minister announced that some people, including 
elderly patients, died on the journey, and it is no surprise really 
when you consider the eyewitness account of a health clinic director in 
the Armenian border city of Goris.
  According to him, most of the patients that they treated at a health 
clinic on the border were ``cases of malnourishment, dehydration, 
people who'd been unable to take prescriptions because they simply 
didn't have access after being on the road for two or three days.''
  The clinic treated these patients as well as others suffering from 
bullet wounds and broken limbs, bruises consistent with beatings, and 
hundreds of cases of shrapnel injuries, some of which required 
amputation.
  If this is not evidence of human rights abuses, then what is? Make no 
mistake, this year alone, the Armenian people have suffered through a 
10-month siege, a lightning military campaign that killed hundreds of 
civilians, and the forced departure of tens of thousands of residents 
from their homes.
  These refugees need our help, and they need it now. With temperatures 
poised to drop during the brutal winter months in the mountainous 
region, these newly displaced refugees will need food, shelter, warm 
clothes, and essential services like healthcare.
  They will need assistance as they try to pick up the pieces that were 
shattered in the frantic rush to flee. And they will need long-term 
support in the midst of a chronic housing crisis in Yerevan that prices 
many families out of the capital city.
  The United States can--and it should--fill this need with clothing 
and blankets, energy assistance, and other humanitarian aid.
  To those who point to the acute suffering currently going on around 
the world, particularly in the Middle East, I ask you this: Should we 
be in the business of picking and choosing which humanitarian crises we 
respond to?
  Whether it is Palestinians being used as human shields by Hamas or 
Armenians forced to leave the only homes they have ever known, should 
we ever ignore the human suffering of those crying out for help?

  To me, it is a false choice to support aid for refugees in some 
circumstances but not others. America has to continue to show up for 
displaced individuals everywhere they are found, especially as we 
defend human rights wherever they are violated.
  Above all, we must continue to press for accountability when it comes 
to those who violate human rights. Wherever assaults are launched 
without warning or provocation, whether it is Russia's unprovoked war 
in Ukraine, Azerbaijan's invasion of Nagorno-Karabakh, or Hamas's 
barbaric terrorist attack on Israel, we have to stand with our allies 
as they seek justice for victims in a way that upholds human rights and 
follows the laws of war.
  The eyes of the world are watching as the United States responds to 
these conflicts. And as we have done so many times before, we must 
leverage our position as a moral authority for good in order to deliver 
necessary aid to the affected regions.
  As I have said, human rights are a central tenet of our foreign 
policy. We cannot afford to lose sight of that in this moment, which is 
why we must continue to raise the plight of Nagorno-Karabakh in the 
Halls of Congress. This cannot be a forgotten genocide as so many 
others have been throughout history. We cannot lose sight of the task 
at hand, which is to stand in the breach and address the Azeri threat 
before it presses its advantage and seeks to seize more territory. That 
is right, more territory.
  President Aliyev has openly stated he would like to ``unite'' his 
country with its exclave in Nakhchivan by cutting through sovereign 
Armenian territory.
  The potential catastrophe that that could set off cannot be 
overstated. The last thing we need in this region is further conflict 
between two states that share their borders with Iran and Turkey.
  Therefore, I submit to my colleagues that our top priority must be to 
stand in the breach and address the threats that Armenia continues to 
face before tensions, again, spiral out of control. We must invoke the 
language of what has happened here in terms of genocide, vowing to 
never forget the horrific actions that Azerbaijan carried out in its 
ruthless campaign.
  I, for one, will not stop or rest until a full accounting of Azeri 
atrocities is completed. I will continue to oppose any and all military 
aid to Azerbaijan in light of their horrific human rights record. And 
the Biden administration should not be using the waiver authority it 
has to give Azerbaijan U.S. military assistance.
  And I will make sure that what happened in Nagorno-Karabakh is never 
forgotten by the powers that be.
  Many of my colleagues will recall a previous instance when the moral 
line between right and wrong was so clear. It was during our successful 
effort to recognize the Armenian genocide after more than 100 years of 
equivocation and denials. That resolution did not come about in a 
single day. It did not come about in just one Congress. When I was a 
Member of the House of Representatives, I helped introduce these 
resolutions every single Congress, and when I came to the Senate, I 
introduced them every single year as well until it finally passed with 
overwhelming bipartisan support in December of 2019.
  That victory, that long-awaited moment, was the result of years--if 
not decades--of dogged advocacy until justice was finally achieved.
  I will never forget then, and I will never forget now. And in this 
same spirit, we cannot let this crisis fade from the memory.
  In the same way that we remember the millions of Armenians who were 
ruthlessly slaughtered by the Ottoman Empire, so, too, must we remember 
the lives lost in Nagorno-Karabakh and the tens of thousands of 
refugees who have been forced from their homes. We have to stand in 
solidarity with them today, tomorrow, and every day going forward. We 
must end our support for the Azeri Government that perpetuated this 
assault, and we must sanction all those responsible for carrying out 
these despicable crimes against humanity.
  That, I believe, is the task before us in the Senate. It is a goal we 
must commit to if we are to shine as a beacon of hope for oppressed 
peoples around the world, to be that moral voice of clarity as it 
relates to human rights.
  You can't pick and choose, and so this is a moment to make sure that 
we stand up for those who have had their human rights ultimately denied 
as a result of the Azeri Government, who were forced out of their 
historic homes and now face the challenges of a bitter winter.
  We can make that bitter winter better.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Texas.