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Armenian Lobbying Group To Fight On Against New U.S. Envoy

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  • Armenian Lobbying Group To Fight On Against New U.S. Envoy

    ARMENIAN LOBBYING GROUP TO FIGHT ON AGAINST NEW U.S. ENVOY
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Sept 8 2006

    A leading Armenian-American lobbying group has pledged more efforts
    to block the congressional confirmation of President George W. Bush's
    pick for new U.S. ambassador to Armenia, which cleared a key hurdle
    on Thursday.

    The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) said it is undaunted
    by career diplomat Richard Hoagland's crucial endorsement by the
    U.S. Senate's Foreign Relations Committee. His confirmation by the
    full Senate now seems a forgone conclusion.

    The committee had twice delayed the vote this summer due to its
    pro-Armenian members' protests against Hoagland's refusal to refer to
    the 1915 mass killings and deportations of Armenians in the Ottoman
    Empire as genocide. Washington's outgoing ambassador in Yerevan, John
    Evans, is believed to have been recalled for publicly recognizing
    the genocide.

    "The ANCA remains firmly opposed to the Hoagland nomination, and
    will continue to seek to block his confirmation until he publicly
    states that he does not question the Armenian Genocide, and the State
    Department explains both its firing of the current Ambassador as well
    as the role of the Turkish government in this controversy," the ANCA
    executive director, Aram Hamparian, said in a statement. Hamparian
    thanked the five senators who voted against Hoagland and denounced
    the Bush administration for its continuing refusal to use the word
    "genocide" with regard to the slaughter of some 1.5 million Ottoman
    Armenians.

    The Armenian Assembly of America, a more moderate advocacy group, also
    praised those lawmakers but stopped short of calling for Hoagland's
    rejection by the Senate. "We appreciate the remarks of the Senators to
    squarely affirm the Armenian Genocide and to urge the Administration
    to review and rethink its current policy," its executive director,
    Bryan Ardouny, said in a statement. "The historical truth is undeniable
    and we will continue to pursue universal and irrevocable affirmation
    of the Armenian Genocide."

    The Assembly's praise was also addressed to those senators who called
    for U.S. recognition of the genocide but voted for Bush's nominee,
    citing U.S. national interests. Among them was Senator Joseph Biden
    of Delaware, who demanded last month an official explanation from
    the State Department regarding Evans's dismissal.

    Another ranking Democrat, John Kerry of Massachusetts, remained adamant
    in rejecting Hoagland's candidacy and accusing the White House of
    caving in to pressure from Turkey. "For us to allow an ambassador
    to be recalled because he uttered the word 'genocide' is to kowtow,
    it's to cave in, to those who change history," Kerry told the Senate
    panel during a 45-minute debate that preceded the 13-to-5 vote.

    "We're not going to allow revisionism ... We honor history and we
    honor the truth," he added, according to AFP.

    Senator Barbara Boxer, a California Democrat, likewise said she can
    not support Hoagland "until we call the first genocide of the 20th
    century by its rightful name." "In Darfur we are witnessing the first
    genocide of the 21st century and the Bush administration called it
    that," Reuters quoted her as saying.

    However, Committee Chairman Richard Lugar, an Indiana Republican,
    countered that rejecting a qualified nominee "because of concerns
    of U.S. policy toward that country (Armenia) would set a troubling
    precedent."
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