Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Row over Armenian genocide puts US envoy's approval on hold

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Row over Armenian genocide puts US envoy's approval on hold

    ROW OVER ARMENIAN GENOCIDE PUTS US ENVOY'S APPROVAL ON HOLD

    Agence France Presse -- English
    August 3, 2006 Thursday 6:46 AM GMT

    by Maxim Kniazkov

    WASHINGTON, Aug 3 2006

    Efforts by the White House to win quick approval for its new ambassador
    to Armenia have hit a snag after a bipartisan group of senators moved
    to force the US government's formal recognition that Turkey committed
    genocide during World War I.

    The Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Tuesday quietly decided
    to postpone for at least a month a vote on the nomination of career
    diplomat Richard Hoagland as the next US Ambassador to Armenia,
    congressional officials said Wednesday.

    The move came as key committee members expressed open consternation
    over the mysterious "resignation" of the current US Ambassador to
    Armenia, John Evans -- after less than two years on the job.

    The senators are also frustrated with the administration's persistent
    refusal to use the word "genocide" to describe events in Turkey between
    1915 and 1917, in which an estimated 1.5 million Armenians are said to
    have been killed or died after being forcibly driven from their homes.

    Armenians all over the world push for official recognition of those
    killings as genocide.

    However, Turkey argues that 300,000 Armenians and at least as many
    Turks died in an internal conflict sparked by attempts by Armenians
    to win independence for eastern Anatolia and secure assistance for
    their bid from Russia, Turkey's age-old nemesis.

    While acknowledging that mass killings have taken place, US government
    officials have so far sidestepped the touchy dispute by referring to
    them as a "tragedy."

    The old row flared on Capitol Hill earlier this summer when Senator
    Joseph Biden, the ranking Democrat on the committee, sent a letter
    to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, questioning what he called an
    "unexpected" decision to replace Evans with Hoagland.

    Evans was posted to Yerevan in August 2004 for what was supposed to
    be a three-year term.

    "In this case, I am particularly troubled by reports that the decision
    to recall Ambassador Evans may have been motivated by statements
    he made to American citizens in which he accurately described the
    Armenian genocide as genocide," Biden wrote.

    In a carefully-crafted response, Assistant Secretary of State
    for Legislative Affairs Jeffrey Bergner assured the senator that
    allegations the envoy had been forced to quit under pressure from
    Turkey were "simply untrue."

    As for Armenian genocide, Bergner insisted that the characterization
    of "this tragedy" should be determined "through heartfelt dialogue,
    not through diplomatic or political proclamations."

    The arguments did not sit well with both Republican and Democratic
    committee members.

    Republican Senator Norm Coleman, who is Jewish, said he took issues
    related to genocide very seriously and wanted the government to take
    a clear-cut position on the subject.

    "I am not sure how we can continue to have ambassadors to Armenia
    who can be effective, unless they give recognition to the genocide,"
    Coleman said.

    Another Republican, George Allen, noted that he personally referred
    to the events of 1915 as genocide "and have strongly encouraged the
    president to do so as well."

    In his letter, Biden directly asked Rice to "please explain why these
    events do not meet any of the five definitions in the Convention on
    the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide."

    Overall, half of the 18-member committee are now said to have
    reservations about endorsing Hoagland as the new Armenia envoy.

    The imbroglio, however, may result in additional strains for US
    relations with Turkey, the only Muslim NATO ally whose cooperation
    is key to US success in the war on terror, experts said.

    Turkey is already upset over cross-border raids by Kurdish separatist
    rebels based in US-occupied Iraq, and is demanding resolute action
    by the United States to halt the incursions.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X