Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Officials question the fate of diplomat

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

  • Officials question the fate of diplomat

    OFFICIALS QUESTION THE FATE OF DIPLOMAT
    By Tania Chatila, News-Press and Leader

    Glendale News Press, CA
    March 26 2006

    Reports say U.S. Ambassador to Armenia may be removed for genocide
    comments.

    GLENDALE -- Rep. Adam Schiff and two other Congressmen have written
    letters or questioned Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice regarding
    reports that the U.S. Ambassador to Armenia is being removed from
    his post over remarks he made last year acknowledging the Armenian
    Genocide.

    The concerns stem from remarks Ambassador John Marshall Evans made
    on a visit to UC Berkeley in February 2005. Evans referred to the
    1915 massacre of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of
    the Ottoman Turks as a genocide.

    The U.S. government does not recognize the killing as a genocide.

    "It was more than just mentioning it in passing," said Aram Hamparian,
    executive director of the Armenian National Committee of America, which
    joined Schiff and Rep. Frank Pallone (D-New Jersey) and Rep. Grace
    Napolitano (D-Santa Fe Springs) in writing letters to the White House
    regarding the matter. "It was an explicit mention of the events and
    why the U.S. government needs to properly recognize those events."

    Since then, Hamparian said the committee has received word that Evans
    is being removed from his position because of the statements.

    "Our information from friends in the American government and the
    Armenian government is that he is being recalled," Hamparian said. "I
    am convinced that he is."

    But Terry Davidson, a State Department spokesman, said that he has
    not been recalled.

    "Generally, we don't open up the personnel process, but ambassadors are
    appointed by the president and serve at the pleasure of president,"
    he said. "Currently, he is the ambassador in Yerevan [Armenia] and
    until the president determines otherwise, he'll be there."

    Despite the State Department's official insistence on the matter,
    the rumor has picked up speed and raised concerns.

    Schiff said he proposed several questions to Rice at an open hearing
    a few weeks ago, and last week met privately with a deputy secretary
    of state and expressed his opposition to a recall.

    "I expressed ... I thought it would be real a travesty," Schiff said.

    "The American government doesn't deny the facts of the genocide, and
    while the government hasn't demonstrated the courage to recognize it,
    that certainly shouldn't compound policy by discharging an ambassador
    that chose to speak the truth."

    If the move goes through, it would be a setback for the
    Armenian-American community, said Armond Aghakhanian, an executive
    board member of the Glendale-based Armenian American Chamber of
    Commerce.

    "He's been a great ambassador and then you get rid of him just because
    of speaking the truth?" he said.

    Aghakhanian said Evans' fate is something that no one wants to admit.

    "I think there are plenty of strong indications that [Evans'] tenure
    is being cut short because of the comments," Schiff said.

    "It certainly has not been a career-enhancer and might be a
    career-ender."

    Evans did not return calls for comment.

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