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BAKU: New US Envoy to Armenia May Fail to Win Confirmation

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  • BAKU: New US Envoy to Armenia May Fail to Win Confirmation

    New US envoy to Armenia may fail to win confirmation

    Turkish Daily News; Jul 19, 2006

    A controversy over the firing of the U.S. ambassador to Yerevan,
    who has classified the Armenian killings of World War I as genocide,
    may lead to a blockade of the new envoy's appointment in the Senate,
    analysts said

    U.S. President George W. Bush dismissed John Evans as ambassador to
    Armenia in May after the latter, in violation of an official American
    policy on the Armenian killings, accused Ottoman Turks of conducting
    genocide

    But since then powerful Armenian American groups have been protesting
    against Evans' firing, urging the Senate to delay the confirmation
    of Richard Hoagland, who has been nominated by Bush to replace the
    outgoing ambassador

    In the latest development, under apparent influence of the Armenian
    groups, the Los Angeles Times called on the Senate to block Hoagland's
    confirmation.

    "They [members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee] should block
    the nomination altogether until the ambassador-to-be dares to utter
    the g-word," the newspaper said in an editorial on Sunday. During
    his confirmation hearing at the committee, Hoagland declined to use
    the word "genocide" despite pressure by pro-Armenian senators.

    Hoagland tried to eschew insistent questions over how he would qualify
    the Armenian killings during his planned tenure in Yerevan. Recalling
    that in his latest April 24 statement Bush referred to the Armenian
    killings as "a tragedy
    the world must not forget," Hoagland said, "I represent the
    president."

    "Instead of getting stuck in the past, and vocabulary, I would like
    to move forward," he said.

    Under the U.S. constitution, all senior U.S. government officials,
    including ambassadors, need to be confirmed by the Senate.

    But nearly half of the committee's 18 members back the Armenian
    cause against Turkey, and have sent written questions to the State
    Department, seeking an official statement on why Evans has been
    dismissed.

    "Hoagland's appointment could hang in the balance," said the Los
    Angeles Times, and some analysts said he may fail to win the Senate
    Foreign Relations Committee's final approval.

    The fact that this is an election year for Congress has been boosting
    the influence of ethnic and other lobbies in congressional decisions,
    the analysts said. One third of the Senate and the whole of the House
    of Representatives will be renewed in the November elections

    Presently Bush's Republican Party is in control of both houses,
    but the polls could provide the opposition Democrats with a majority
    in at least one of the chambers. So even one single seat carries an
    enormous importance for both parties

    "The Bush administration should have the courage and explain
    forthrightly -- not just to Armenian Americans but to all Americans who
    believe in calling evil by its proper name -- why U.S. policy is being
    dictated by Ankara nationalists," the Los Angeles Times editorial said.

    Los Angeles is in California, the United States' largest state and
    home to up to one million Armenian Americans

    Addressing an Armenian audience in the United States in February
    2005, Evans said that the World War I killing of Armenians in the
    Ottoman Empire amounted to genocide. Warned by his superiors at
    the State Department, he then issued a "clarification" where he
    said his remarks reflected his own views. Still pressed by the State
    Department, Evans later issued a further "correction," admitting that
    his statement misrepresented the U.S. policy. But Bush fired Evans
    in May after the latter continued to deviate from the official U.S.
    policy, according to administration sources.

    "Ambassadors serve the president and they are obliged to follow his
    policy. President Bush's policy as it regards the mass killings of
    Armenians is precise and he mentions it in his annual statement,"
    said recently Matt Bryza, U.S. deputy assistant secretary of state
    for European and Eurasian affairs.
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