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ANKARA: US Senator blocks vote on "Genocide Denier" envoy nominee

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  • ANKARA: US Senator blocks vote on "Genocide Denier" envoy nominee

    Turkish Daily News
    September 14, 2006 Thursday

    US SENATOR BLOCKS VOTE ON 'GENOCIDE DENIER' ENVOY NOMINEE TO ARMENIA



    A pro-Armenian senator on Tuesday put a hold on the nomination of
    U.S. President George W. Bush's pick for ambassador to Yerevan, who
    has refused to recognize the "Armenian genocide," in protest of what
    he called the administration's policy to deny the genocide

    Democratic Senator Robert Menendez of New Jersey said the United
    States must recognize that last century's Armenian killings in the
    Ottoman Empire amounted to genocide

    His move came after the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last week
    voted 13-5 to send ambassador nominee Richard Hoagland's case to the
    full Senate for a floor vote

    Although U.S. Armenian groups were disappointed by the committee's
    Sept. 7 vote to confirm the "genocide denying" Hoagland, they still
    vowed to continue with efforts to block him, urging senators to put a
    hold on his nomination

    "Mr. Hoagland has declined to acknowledge the mass killings of the
    Armenians as genocide, and has said that if confirmed, he would work
    to represent the president's policy," Menendez said, explaining his
    hold. "Considering Mr. Hoagland's refusal to acknowledge the Armenian
    genocide as anything more than horrifying events, I do not feel that
    his nomination is in the best interest of Armenia and her (its)
    diaspora." Menendez' move came at a time when politicians are vying
    for minority votes two months before critical congressional
    elections.

    Under U.S. law, all senior government officials, including
    ambassadors, must win the Senate's approval, and any senator can
    indefinitely block nominations. But such moves are rare, because they
    put such dissenting senators under intense pressure

    Until Menendez lifts his hold, the Senate cannot vote on Hoagland's
    nomination

    But under U.S. law, the president can also appoint senior officials
    for two years by bypassing the Senate when Congress is in recess, and
    analysts said Bush may use this power for Hoagland. Congress is
    expected to go for recess in October to prepare for the November
    elections

    "I wouldn't be surprised if Bush opts for a recess appointment of
    Hoagland shortly after the elections," said a Washington analyst.
    "The administration doesn't want to leave the embassy in Yerevan
    without an ambassador for a long time." Bush in May fired the
    previous envoy to Armenia, John Evans, after the latter classified
    the Armenian killings as genocide. Armenian groups have strongly
    protested against the decision and have pledged to block Hoagland's
    confirmation process

    The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), a key U.S.
    Armenian group, welcomed the hold placed by Menendez

    "We join with Armenians from New Jersey and throughout the United
    States in thanking Senator Menendez for his principled stand in
    blocking the Hoagland nomination," said ANCA Chairman Ken Hachikian.
    "The senator's hold represents a victory for our nation's standing on
    human rights and genocide-prevention." Addressing an Armenian
    audience in the United States last year, Evans said that the World
    War I killing of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire amounted to
    genocide. Warned by his superiors at the State Department, he then
    issued a "clarification" where he said his remarks reflected his own
    views. Still pressed by the State Department, Evans later issued a
    further "correction," admitting that his statement misrepresented the
    U.S. policy.

    But Bush fired Evans after the latter continued to deviate from the
    official U.S. policy, according to administration sources. Bush then
    nominated Hoagland, a former ambassador to Dushanbe, Tajikistan, to
    replace Evans.

    During his confirmation hearing at the committee in June, Hoagland
    declined to use the word "genocide" despite pressure by pro-Armenian
    senators. He tried to eschew insistent questions over how he would
    qualify the Armenian killings during his planned tenure in Yerevan.
    Recalling that in the latest April 24 statement Bush referred to the
    Armenian killings as "a tragedy the world must not forget," Hoagland
    said, "I represent the president."

    He also said that "instead of getting stuck in the past and
    vocabulary, I would like to move forward," angering the Armenian
    groups.
    From: Baghdasarian
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