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  • ASBAREZ Online [07-17-2006]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    07/17/2006
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ. COM

    1) LA Times Calls on Senate to Block Hoagland Nomination
    2) Tense Calm in Armenian Areas As Israel Continues to Pound Lebanon
    3) G8 Leaders Urge Armenia, Azerbaijan To Cut Karabakh Deal

    1) LA Times Calls on Senate to Block Hoagland Nomination

    WASHINGTON--A policy editorial published today by the Los Angeles Times,
    largest newspaper in the Western United States, marks a major and very public
    setback for the US Department of State's increasingly untenable policy of
    complicity in Turkey's denial of the Armenian Genocide, reported the Armenian
    National Committee of America.
    The editorial sharply criticizes the Bush Administration's decision to fire
    the US Ambassador to Armenia, John Evans, for truthfully discussing the
    Armenian Genocide.
    Noting that half of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has already raised
    concerns about this matter, the editorial board calls on the panel to block
    the
    nomination of the ambassador-designate, Richard Hoagland, until he properly
    recognizes the Armenian Genocide. They closed their powerfully worded
    piece by
    stressing that, "the Bush administration should have the courage of its
    lack of
    conviction and explain forthrightly ­ not just to Armenian-Americans but to
    all
    Americans who believe in calling evil by its proper name ­ why US policy is
    being dictated by Ankara nationalists."
    The Sunday edition of the Los Angeles Times has a circulation to over 1.2
    million households and reaches millions more over the internet.
    To join with the thousands of activists around the nation who have written to
    the State Department on this matter, visit:
    <http://capwiz.com/anca/issues/alert/?al ertid=8896316&type=CO>http://capwiz
    .com/an ca/issues/alert/?alertid=8896316&type=CO
    The complete text of the Los Angeles Times editorial is provided below.

    Speak No Evil?
    July 16, 2006

    What happens when you refer to Turkey's 1915-1923 genocide of Armenians,
    accurately, as "genocide"? In Turkey, you face a possible three-year jail
    term,
    even if it wasn't you using the term but a character in your novel. In the
    United States, you just lose your job as ambassador to Armenia.
    The novelist is Elif Shafak, who learned last week she will go on trial for
    defamation of the Turkish Republic. The former ambassador is John M. Evans,
    who
    was recalled from Yerevan in May after referring to the "Armenian genocide" in
    a speech before a group of Armenian Americans in February 2005. As one State
    Department bigwig told an Armenian newspaper: "Ambassadors serve the
    president,
    and they are obliged to follow his policy. President Bush's policy as regards
    the mass killings of Armenians is precise."
    Precisely what purpose this policy serves is clear: avoid using the most
    truthful word in the English language to describe an eight-decade-old atrocity
    for fear of offending a crucial NATO ally. As Bush's proposed replacement for
    Evans, Richard Hoagland, put it last month during his confirmation hearing,
    "Instead of getting stuck in the past and vocabulary, I would like to see what
    we can do to bring different sides together."
    Vocabulary may not be the president's best subject ­ Bush himself has poked
    fun at his frequent malapropisms ­ but he's shown he knows the meaning of the
    word "genocide." Campaigning for the White House in 2000, Bush told Armenian
    American groups that "the 20th
    century was marred by wars of unimaginable brutality, mass murder and
    genocide"
    and that "history records that the Armenians were the first people of the last
    century to have endured these cruelties."
    If elected president, I would ensure that our nation properly recognizes the
    tragic suffering of the Armenian people."
    It's one of the more blatant of Bush's broken campaign promises. Luckily, the
    Senate is showing signs of giving this rhetorical appeasement the rebuke it
    deserves. Half of the senators on the Foreign Relations Committee have
    demanded
    that the State Department give an official explanation for Evans' premature
    recall, and some have hinted that Hoagland's appointment could hang in the
    balance.
    They should block the nomination altogether until the ambassador-to-be dares
    to utter the g-word.
    And the Bush administration should have the courage of its lack of conviction
    and explain forthrightly--not just to Armenian Americans but too all Americans
    who believe in calling evil by its proper name--why US policy is being
    dictated
    by Ankara.

    2) Tense Calm in Armenian Areas As Israel Continues to Pound Lebanon

    BEIRUT, YEREVAN (Aztag, Armenpress)--A tense calm was reported in Armenian
    areas of Lebanon, as the Israeli attack on Lebanon entered its sixth day. At
    press time, Aztag Daily reported no significant damage or disturbance in the
    Armenian areas of the country.
    Sources at Aztag told Asbarez that the community is weathering this crisis as
    bravely as possible, although citizens are naturally concerned about Lebanon's
    fate.
    In an editorial appeal, Aztag has urged the Lebanese-Armenian community to
    confront this recent crisis with patience and courage.
    "In this situation, Armenian Revolutionary Federation community centers are
    making all necessary preparations to provide emergency assistance and to
    create
    the mechanisms to provide for the needs of the community," stated the Aztag
    editorial appeal.
    In the event of further escalation of the current situation and a more severe
    impact on Armenian areas of Lebanon, the newspaper urged community members to
    go to their neighborhood centers and come together "to overcome, once again,
    another stage of war."
    Armenia's foreign ministry announced that around 70 Armenian citizens will be
    transported from Lebanon to Syria from where they will be flown to Armenia,
    reported the Armenpress news agency.
    Officials from the Armenian embassy in Lebanon will meet them on the
    Syrian-Lebanese border and ensure their safe transportation to Aleppo.
    Third secretary of the embassy Arsen Arakelian told Armenpress that Armenian
    citizens living in Lebanon were informed about the evacuation and in all
    likelihood, there are no Armenian citizens left in Beirut.
    "The evacuation is taking place on their own volition. If there are people
    who
    want to stay here until the end of the crisis, it will on their own will. The
    embassy will try to help with everything," he said.
    The secretary said that the embassy will continue its daily operation.
    In a related story, Aztag newspaper reported that the Hamazkayine "Sevan"
    Dance Ensemble of Australia was touring Lebanon and was stuck in Beirut on the
    day of its members departure.
    "Our final stop over was Beirut and after another magnificent performance in
    front of a sold out crowd, we were ready to head home for Sydney. That was
    until we woke on the day of our departure to the news that the runways at
    Beirut airport had been bombed. We were told by the Australian Embassy in
    Lebanon that it was safest to stay at our hotel until further notice," wrote
    Levon Demirian a member of the dance troupe.
    "Phone calls from concerned parents in Australia have not stopped, but rest
    assured we're in an excellent hotel in the safest area in the outskirts of
    Beirut and have plenty of food and drink. Some of the kids are running out of
    spending money, but parents are able to send it through Western Union or the
    Australian Embassy in case our stay is lengthened," added Demirian.
    "The most frustrating and stressful thing at the moment is the
    uncertainty. No
    one is able to tell us when and how we can leave. Everyone is looking out for
    each other and sticking close by," concluded Demirian.

    3) G8 Leaders Urge Armenia, Azerbaijan To Cut Karabakh Deal

    ST. PETERSBURG (RFE/RL)--The leaders of the Group of Eight (G8) wealthiest
    nations on Monday threw their weight behind international efforts to resolve
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and urged Armenia and Azerbaijan to cut a
    framework peace deal this year.
    "We call on Armenia and Azerbaijan to demonstrate the political will, reach
    agreement and prepare their publics for peace and not for war," they said in a
    joint statement issued at the end of their two-day meeting in the Russian city
    of Saint Petersburg.
    The statement, as cited by the Russian Itar-Tass news agency, said the
    Karabakh conflict was on the agenda of the G8 summit. "We confirmed that the
    Group of Eight supports the mediation efforts of the co-chairs of the OSCE
    Minsk Group and stressed the need for agreeing on the basic principles of a
    peaceful settlement of the conflict as early as in 2006," it said.
    However, the unresolved Karabakh dispute appears to have been overshadowed by
    other, more pressing international issues. Reports from Saint Petersburg
    indicated that the G8 leaders concentrated on mounting tensions in the Middle
    East, Iran's nuclear program, North Korea's missile tests and global trade.
    Three of the G8 powers -- France, Russia and the United States -- have
    spearheaded international efforts to end the Karabakh conflict over the past
    decade, and are believed to have been very close to fulfilling their
    mission at
    the beginning of this year. However, two rounds of subsequent negotiations
    between the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan proved fruitless, all but
    ending hopes for the signing of a Karabakh peace accord by the end of 2006.
    Armenian and Azeri media reports last month said the mediating powers might
    invite Presidents Robert Kocharian and Ilham Aliyev to the G8 summit in yet
    another attempt to break the Karabakh deadlock. But both leaders made it clear
    last week that they see no need for such an encounter.
    The American, French and Russian mediators, for their part, stated earlier
    this month that further Armenian-Azeri peace talks will be pointless unless
    Aliyev and Kocharian display enough commitment to mutual compromise. The move
    suggested that both Russia and the West are unlikely to step up pressure on
    the
    conflicting parties.
    Speaking in Saint Petersburg on Sunday, Russian President Vladimir Putin said
    Moscow will not seek to impose any solutions on either party. "We would like
    Armenia and Azerbaijan to find a mutually acceptable solution," he said,
    according to the Regnum news agency. "I can confirm our position: Russia will
    not be imposing a solution neither on Armenia, nor on Azerbaijan. Compromise
    has to be reached by the peoples of these countries."
    The Minsk Group's US co-chair, Matthew Bryza, likewise told RFE/RL on June 27
    that Washington has no intention to "force people to agree." "You can't have a
    just and lasting settlement if it's just strong US leverage forcing an
    agreement," said Bryza. "The sides have to decide that they've reached an
    agreement that they truly can embrace."

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