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Kocharian Honors U.S. Envoy

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  • Kocharian Honors U.S. Envoy

    KOCHARIAN HONORS U.S. ENVOY
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Sept 6 2006

    President Robert Kocharian handed on Wednesday a prestigious state
    award to John Evans during a farewell meeting with the outgoing U.S.
    ambassador to Armenia.

    Kocharian said, according to his office, that he decided to award
    the Mkhitar Gosh Medal to Evans in recognition of the latter's
    "remarkable contribution to the development and strengthening of
    Armenian-American friendly relations." The bilateral ties have made
    "serious progress" and yielded "tangible results" during the retiring
    diplomat's two-year service in Armenia, the presidential press service
    quoted him as saying.

    Evans was cited as agreeing with Kocharian and singling out the U.S.
    government's decision earlier this year to provide $235.6 million
    worth of economic assistance to Armenia under the Millennium Challenge
    Account (MCA) program. He is apparently the first U.S. government
    official awarded by the Armenian government.

    The award appears to be a thinly veiled gesture of gratitude
    for Evans's public description of the 1915-1918 mass killings
    and deportations of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey as genocide. "The
    Armenian Genocide was the first genocide of the 20th century," the
    envoy had declared during a series of meetings in early 2005 with
    Armenian-American activists in California.

    The bombshell remarks contradicted a long-running U.S. government
    policy of avoiding the use of the word genocide with regard to the
    Armenian massacres. They are believed to have been instrumental in
    the Bush administration's decision, officially announced in May,
    to replace Evans with another career diplomat. The normal diplomatic
    term for U.S. ambassadors abroad is three years.

    In an interview with RFE/RL last week, Evans refused to comment
    on the controversy triggered by his recall, saying that it is an
    internal U.S. affair. He indicated that he might speak up about it
    in a future book.
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