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US Senate Panel Postpones Vote on UN Nominee

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  • US Senate Panel Postpones Vote on UN Nominee

    Voice of America
    Sept 7 2006

    US Senate Panel Postpones Vote on UN Nominee
    By Dan Robinson
    Capitol Hill
    07 September 2006

    A key Senate panel has postponed a vote on the nomination of John
    Bolton for a full- term appointment as U.S. Ambassador to the United
    Nations. The unexpected development came as the Senate Foreign
    Relations Committee considered a number of President Bush's key
    diplomatic nominations.

    John Bolton
    Bolton's nomination, and therefore his confirmation by the full
    Senate, has been held up for months even as he has temporarily
    carried out his duties at the United Nations under a recess
    appointment made last August by President Bush.

    That appointment expires January 1, and the president has made it
    clear on numerous occasions his determination to have Bolton
    confirmed by the Senate.

    Republican Senator Richard Lugar, the chairman of the Foreign
    Relations Committee, explained the postponement during Wednesday's
    committee session.

    "We had originally intended to vote on the nomination of John Bolton
    to be ambassador to the U.N. However, I am removing the nomination
    from today's agenda after conferring with several senators," he said.

    Eventually, Bolton is expected to have the support of 10 committee
    Republicans, although one key senator, Lincoln Chafee, has not yet
    said how he will vote.

    The nomination has been troublesome for Senator Lugar, who had to
    overcome opposition from one key Republican Senator, George
    Voinovich, and from Democrats who successfully blocked the Bolton
    nomination in the Senate last year.

    All eight committee Democrats have opposed Bolton, and Senator Chris
    Dodd has urged fellow Democrats to filibuster Bolton's nomination if
    it does get to the Senate floor.

    Senator Lugar has not said when the nomination will be scheduled
    again at committee level.

    In separate actions, the Foreign Relations panel also approved six
    ambassadorial or diplomatic nominations.

    One, Richard Hoagland as ambassador to Armenia, sparked statements by
    some senators upset that the U.S. government does not officially
    recognize as genocide the forced mass evacuation, and deaths related
    to it, of hundreds of thousands of Armenians during the Ottoman
    Empire.

    Among the comments were these by Democrat Joseph Biden and Senator
    Lugar, who said rejecting the Hoagland nomination would set a
    troubling precedent and harm U.S. efforts to work with a
    strategically important nation.

    "I think the administration's policy [on the Armenian genocide issue]
    is not only wrong, it is factually inconsistent with history," Sen.

    Biden said.

    "Further delay in posting a highly-qualified nominee in Yerevan is
    not in the interest of U.S. national security or our credibility in
    the region," said Sen. Lugar.

    The Senate committee also approved and sent to the Senate for
    ratification the U.S.-Britain extradition treaty which lawmakers
    noted will help both countries deal with the worsening threat of
    Islamist terrorism.
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