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ANCA Asks Sec. Rice to Explain News of Amb. Evans' Recall

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  • ANCA Asks Sec. Rice to Explain News of Amb. Evans' Recall

    Armenian National Committee of America
    888 17th St., NW Suite 904
    Washington, DC 20006
    Tel: (202) 775-1918
    Fax: (202) 775-5648
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Internet: www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    March 8, 2006
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    ANCA CALLS ON SECRETARY RICE TO
    EXPLAIN REPORTS OF AMB. EVANS' RECALL

    -- National Chairman Asks Secretary to Confirm or
    Deny that the U.S. Ambassador is being Punished
    for his Acknowledgment of the Armenian Genocide

    "If, in fact, the State Department has taken
    punitive steps against Ambassador Evans, you
    should fully and openly explain your policies
    and actions to the American people. If, on the
    other hand, the Department has not taken any
    such steps, you owe it to the American people
    to affirm that it is not the policy of the
    United States of America to punish its diplomats
    for speaking the truth about the Armenian
    Genocide." -- ANCA Chairman Ken Hachikian

    WASHINGTON, DC - Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
    Chairman Ken Hachikian today called upon Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice to address reports that the U.S. Ambassador to
    Armenia, John Marshall Evans, is being forced from office based
    upon truthful and forthright statements last April about the
    Armenian Genocide.

    In a March 8th letter, Hachikian asked Secretary Rice to comment on
    published accounts (California Courier, March 9,2006) that the
    Ambassador is being recalled, well before the normal end of his
    term of office, due to remarks during a series of presentations to
    Armenian American communities across the country.

    Speaking last year to an Armenian American gathering at the
    University of California at Berkeley, Amb. Evans said, "I will
    today call it the Armenian Genocide... I informed myself in depth
    about it. I think we, the U.S. government, owe you, our fellow
    citizens, a more frank and honest way of discussing this problem.
    Today, as someone who has studied it . . . there's no doubt in my mind
    [as to] what happened . . . I think it is unbecoming of us, as
    Americans, to play word games here. I believe in calling things by
    their name." Referring to the Armenian Genocide as "the first
    genocide of the 20th century," he said: "I pledge to you, we are
    going to do a better job at addressing this issue." Amb. Evans also
    disclosed that he had consulted with a legal advisor at the State
    Department who had confirmed that the events of 1915 were "genocide
    by definition."

    Within days after his remarks and the conclusion of a speaking tour
    of Armenian American communities, Ambassador Evans was apparently
    forced to issue a statement clarifying that his references to the
    Armenian Genocide were his personal views and did not represent a
    change in U.S. policy. He subsequently issued a correction to this
    statement, replacing a reference to the Genocide with the word
    "tragedy."

    Later last year, the American Foreign Service Association (AFSA),
    in recognition of his honesty and commitment to principle, decided
    to honor Ambassador Evans with the "Christian A. Herter Award,"
    recognizing creative thinking and intellectual courage within the
    Foreign Service. Sadly, as Washington Post staff writer Glenn
    Kessler revealed on June 9th, AFSA withdrew its award following
    pressure from "very serious people from the State Department."

    In his letter, Hachikian wrote that, "the prospect that a U.S.
    envoy's posting - and possibly his career - has been cut short due
    to his honest and accurate description of a genocide is profoundly
    offensive to American values and U.S. standing abroad -
    particularly in light of President Bush's call for moral clarity in
    the conduct of our international affairs."

    He added that, "if, in fact, punitive measures are being taken
    against Ambassador Evans, this would represent a tragic retreat
    from our nation's core values. It would also represent a new low
    in our government's shameful complicity in the Turkish government's
    campaign of denial. Not only does the State Department continue to
    be publicly silent as Turkey criminally prosecutes its writers and
    citizens for speaking about the Armenian Genocide, it appears the
    State Department is following Turkey's lead by muzzling and
    punishing an American diplomat for his speech and his
    acknowledgement of a genocide that is extensively documented in the
    State Department's own archives."

    The ANCA letter also urged Secretary Rice to respond in a timely
    manner to the series of written questions on this matter submitted
    on February 16th by Congressman Adam Schiff during her testimony
    before the House International Relations Committee. Among these
    questions was a specific request that the Secretary assure the
    Committee that the Department of State has not taken - and will not
    take - any punitive action against Ambassador Evans for speaking
    out about the Armenian Genocide.

    The full text of the ANCA letter is provided below.

    #####

    March 8, 2006

    The Honorable Condoleezza Rice
    Secretary of State
    Department of State
    2201 C Street, NW
    Washington, DC 20520

    Dear Secretary Rice:

    I am writing with respect to extremely troubling reports regarding
    punitive actions by the State Department against our country's
    Ambassador to Armenia, John Marshall Evans, based upon his truthful
    and forthright statements about the Armenian Genocide.

    The most recent edition of the California Courier (March 9, 2006),
    a respected Armenian American newspaper, has reported, based on
    well-placed sources in the Armenian government, that Ambassador
    Evans is being recalled, well before the normal end of his term of
    office, due to his speech on the Armenian Genocide. The prospect
    that a U.S. envoy's posting - and possibly his career - has been
    cut short due to his honest and accurate description of a genocide
    is profoundly offensive to American values and U.S. standing abroad
    - particularly in light of President Bush's call for moral clarity
    in the conduct of our international affairs.

    If, in fact, punitive measures are being taken against Ambassador
    Evans, this would represent a tragic retreat from our nation's core
    values. It would also represent a new low in our government's
    shameful complicity in the Turkish government's campaign of denial.
    Not only does the State Department continue to be publicly silent
    as Turkey criminally prosecutes its writers and citizens for
    speaking about the Armenian Genocide, it appears the State
    Department is following Turkey's lead by muzzling and punishing an
    American diplomat for his speech and his acknowledgment of a
    genocide that is extensively documented in the State Department's
    own archives.

    As you recall, earlier this year, on February 16th, Congressman
    Adam Schiff submitted a series of written questions regarding this
    matter to you during your testimony before the House International
    Relations Committee. Among these was a specific request that you
    assure the Committee that the Department of State has not taken -
    and will not take - any punitive action against Ambassador Evans
    for speaking out about the Armenian Genocide. As of today, I
    understand that he has yet to receive a response to this inquiry.

    In the interest of ensuring that the Congress has the information
    it needs to perform its constitutionally mandated oversight
    function, I urge you to respond fully and in a timely manner to
    Congressman Schiff's questions. More broadly, I call upon you to
    clarify the State Department's actions regarding this matter. If,
    in fact, the State Department has taken punitive steps against
    Ambassador Evans, you should fully and openly explain your policies
    and actions to the American people. If, on the other hand, the
    Department has not taken any such steps, you owe it to the American
    people to affirm that it is not the policy of the United States of
    America to punish its diplomats for speaking the truth about the
    Armenian Genocide.

    Thank you for your attention to this matter. Along with over one
    and a half million Armenian Americans across the country, I look
    forward to your response to this issue.

    Sincerely,


    Kenneth V. Hachikian
    Chairman
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