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Lawmakers Question Removal Of U.S. Envoy In Armenia

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  • Lawmakers Question Removal Of U.S. Envoy In Armenia

    LAWMAKERS QUESTION REMOVAL OF U.S. ENVOY IN ARMENIA
    By Jocelyne Zablit, AFP

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    May 26 2006

    U.S. lawmakers are questioning the apparent dismissal of the US
    ambassador to Armenia over a statement he made in which he recognized
    the 1915 massacre of Armenians as genocide.

    Sixty members of Congress on Monday sent a letter to Secretary of
    State Condoleezza Rice to express concern about ambassador John
    Evans's early departure from Yerevan in coming weeks.

    The White House on Tuesday nominated Richard Hoagland, the current
    ambassador to Tajikistan, to replace Evans. His nomination requires
    confirmation by the Senate.

    The lawmakers said in their letter to Rice that recent information
    indicates Evans was sacked for declaring in February 2005 that "the
    Armenian genocide was the first genocide of the 20th century". He
    made the statement in meetings with Armenian-American communities.

    Evans later corrected his remarks, as Washington does not officially
    recognize as genocide the massacre of up to 1.5 million Armenians in
    the final years of the Ottoman Empire.

    "I am seriously concerned at the early departure of Ambassador Evans,"
    Congressman Ed Markey, a Democrat, said Wednesday in a statement. "I
    hope that this sudden action by the State Department is not related
    to comments made by Ambassador Evans about the Armenian genocide."

    The State Department had no immediate comment but a spokesman
    underlined that all ambassadors serve at the pleasure of the president.

    The 60 congressmen who signed the letter to Rice defended his use of
    the word "genocide", saying it was a proper interpretation of the
    "cataclysmic events of 1915". "By employing the proper term last
    year, the ambassador was only building on previous statements by
    our leaders in government, as well as the repeated declarations of
    numerous world-renowned scholars," the letter states, referring to
    comments made by then-president Ronald Reagan in 1981 in which he
    specifically used the word genocide in describing massacres.

    "In effect, Ambassador Evans did nothing more than succinctly repeat
    the conclusions enunciated by those before him," the lawmakers said.

    They also questioned whether Turkey had played a part in Evans's
    departure from Armenia.

    "Were the United States to allow the views or beliefs of a third
    country to interfere with our diplomatic postings to the Republic of
    Armenia, it would establish a dangerous precedent and be injurious to
    the long-standing relationship built on trust and friendship between
    the two countries," the letter said.

    Evans, a career diplomat, was appointed ambassador to Armenia in
    August 2004. Ambassadors typically serve overseas for an average of
    three years.

    The U.S. administration has consistently stopped short of calling the
    World War I massacres of Armenians a genocide. However several other
    countries, including France, Canada and Switzerland, recognize them
    as such.

    Turkey has lobbied hard against the "genocide" label, arguing that
    300,000 Armenians and as many Turks were killed in civil strife
    in the final years of the Ottoman Empire when the Armenians rose
    up for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with invading
    Russian troops.
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