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U.S. State Department Communicating Evans' Recall with Turkey

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  • U.S. State Department Communicating Evans' Recall with Turkey

    U.S. State Department Communicating Evans' Recall with Turkey

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    26.07.2006 15:00 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ In yet another troubling development concerning
    the controversial nomination of Richard Hoagland to serve as
    U.S. Ambassador to Armenia, Department of Justice records have revealed
    that the State Department has misled the U.S. Senate regarding its
    communications with the Turkish government concerning the February
    2005 public affirmation of the Armenian Genocide by U.S. Ambassador to
    Armenia John Marshall Evans, reported the Armenian National Committee
    of America (ANCA).

    In a letter, dated June 28, 2005 written on behalf of Secretary
    of State Condoleezza Rice to Senator Joseph Biden (D-DE), the
    Ranking Democrat of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
    the State Department denied that the Turkish government had even
    approached the Administration on this issue. However, official
    Foreign Agent Registration filings by the Turkish government's
    registered foreign agent, the Livingston Group, document that, in
    the days following Ambassador Evans' February 19, 2005 remarks, one
    of Turkey's agents communicated on at least four different occasions
    with State Department officials concerning the envoy's statement and
    his subsequent retraction.

    "With each new revelation, we see more clearly the corrosive
    impact that the Administration's complicity in Turkey's denial is
    having on our own core values as Americans," said ANCA Chairman Ken
    Hachikian. "This latest failed attempt by the State Department to
    mislead the Senate adds to the many compelling reasons to block the
    confirmation of a new Ambassador to Armenia."

    Consistent with the pattern of unresponsiveness that has come to
    characterize the Administration's actions on the Hoagland nomination,
    the only answer the State Department chose to provide in response
    to Senator Biden's four questions was a misleading one. His other
    inquiries - including an official request for an explanation of why
    Ambassador Evans was being replaced prematurely - remain unanswered.

    On June 23rd, as part of Ambassador Richard Hoagland's confirmation
    process to replace Amb. Evans in Yerevan, Senator Biden wrote a letter
    asking Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice a series of questions
    including the following: "Has the State Department received any
    communication - written, electronic, or spoken - from the Turkish
    Government concerning Ambassador Evans?"

    Assistant Secretary of State for Legislative Affairs Jeffrey T. Bergner
    responded on behalf of Secretary Rice with the following assertion:
    "Please be assured that allegations that the U.S. is removing
    Ambassador Evans under pressure from the Government of Turkey
    are simply untrue. The Government of Turkey has not approached the
    Administration on this issue, and the United States and Turkey engaged
    in no diplomatic exchanges related to this matter."

    However, Justice Department filings by the Livingston Group reveal
    that a day after Amb. Evans' statements on the Armenian Genocide were
    publicized in an ANCA-San Francisco press release dated February
    24, 2005, a Turkish agent communicated with the State Department
    concerning his statements. On February 28, 2005, one business day
    after the agent's first phone call, Ambassador Evans issued his
    first public retraction - noting that his mention of the Armenian
    Genocide was made in a private capacity. Later that same day, the
    Livingston Group reported three additional calls between one of
    Turkey's agents and State Department officials including the Deputy
    Chief of Mission-designate at the U.S. Embassy in Ankara to discuss
    Ambassador Evans' retraction. The very next day on March 1, 2005,
    Ambassador Evans issued a public correction of his retraction -
    removing entirely any mention of the Armenian Genocide.
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