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Senate Panel Approves Nominee For Ambassador To Armenia

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  • Senate Panel Approves Nominee For Ambassador To Armenia

    SENATE PANEL APPROVES NOMINEE FOR AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA
    George Gedda

    AP Worldstream
    Sep 07, 2006

    A Senate panel on Thursday approved the nomination of career diplomat
    Richard Hoagland to be ambassador to Armenia, despite objections by
    some senators to the Bush administration's refusal to classify the
    deaths of 1.5 million Armenians in 1915 as "genocide."

    The Senate Foreign Relations Committee vote was 13-5. The nomination
    will now be considered by the full Senate.

    At his June 28 confirmation hearing, Hoagland declined to use the
    word genocide to describe the 1915 killings, which occurred during
    the waning days of the Ottoman Empire.

    The tour of duty of the current ambassador, John Evans, reportedly
    was curtailed because he referred to the killings as a genocide in
    defiance of administration policy.

    Turkey strongly objects to any such characterization. U.S. policymakers
    are wary of antagonizing Turkey, an important NATO ally.

    Armenians say that as many as 1.5 million of their ancestors were
    killed in an organized genocidal campaign by Ottoman Turks, and have
    pushed for recognition of the killings as genocide around the world.

    Committee Chairman Richard Lugar said Hoagland's nomination should
    be sent to the Senate for final approval.

    The Senate, he said, "should not withhold confirmation based on
    disagreements with administration policy." It would be "troubling"
    if such a precedent were to be set.

    He pointed out that Armenia is an important country with borders on
    Iran, Turkey and Azerbaijan. Rejection of Hoagland would mean that
    months would pass before an alternate ambassador could be found.

    Sen. Norm Coleman, a Republican, said he could not "be in a position
    to support a nominee who is not in a position to recognize a historical
    reality."

    Sen. Barbara Boxer, a Democrat, said she could not support the
    nomination.

    "I will today call it the Armenian genocide," she said. "There is no
    doubt about what happened. I believe is calling things by their names."
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