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ANCA Outlines Bush Admin. Failings on Armenian American Issues

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  • ANCA Outlines Bush Admin. Failings on Armenian American Issues

    Armenian National Committee of America
    1711 N Street, NW
    Washington, DC 20036
    Tel. (202) 775-1918
    Fax. (202) 775-5648
    Email [email protected]
    Internet www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    April 8, 2008
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    ANCA OUTLINES 13 FAILINGS BY THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION ON ARMENIAN
    AMERICAN ISSUES

    WASHINGTON, DC - The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA),
    in a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, has outlined
    the Armenian American community's concerns regarding the Bush
    Administration's seven-year record of largely counterproductive,
    frequently unfriendly, and, at times, antagonistic policies toward
    Armenia and the Armenian American community.

    The April 4th letter, signed by ANCA Chairman Ken Hachikian, listed
    thirteen areas in which the President and his Administration fell
    short of both their own commitments and our nation's basic human
    rights standards, retreated from America's historic commitment to
    Armenia, and strained - through a series of ill-advised policies
    and often hostile actions - the enduring ties that have long bound
    together the American and Armenian peoples. The following points
    are covered in significant detail in the 6-page letter, the full
    text of which is provided below:

    1) The President's broken campaign pledge to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide
    2) Opposition to the Congressional Genocide Resolution
    3) The Evans firing and the Hoagland nominations
    4) The waiver of Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act
    5) Reduction in aid to Armenia
    6) Abandonment of the military aid parity agreement
    7) Mistaken listing of Armenia as a terrorist country
    8) Lack of U.S.-Armenia Presidential visitations
    9) Failure to confront the desecration of the Djulfa cemetery
    10) Failure to maintain a balanced policy on Nagorno Karabagh
    11) Taxpayer financing of the Baku-Ceyhan bypass of Armenia
    12) Failure to effectively pressure Turkey and Azerbaijan to end
    their blockades
    13) Neglect of relations with the Armenian American community

    Over the course of the past seven years, the ANCA has repeatedly
    requested, to no avail, the opportunity to meet with the President
    and his Secretary of State to discuss these and other issues of
    concern to Armenian Americans. This most recent ANCA letter, once
    again, asks for such a meeting, inviting the Secretary of State to
    visit with the collective leadership of the Armenian American
    community to discuss U.S. foreign policy toward Armenia and the
    surrounding region over the remaining months of the Bush
    Administration.

    #####


    April 4, 2008


    The Honorable Condoleezza Rice
    Secretary of State
    U.S. Department of State
    Washington, DC 20520

    Re: Administration policies on Armenian American issues

    Dear Secretary Rice:

    As the Administration of George W. Bush completes its final year in
    office, we write to once again ask you to meet with the collective
    leadership of the Armenian American community to discuss our
    commonly held views and express our shared disappointments
    regarding the Administration's policies on a broad range of foreign
    policy issues of special concern to our nation's one and a half
    million Americans of Armenian heritage.

    We are profoundly disappointed by the Administration's complicity
    in Turkey's denial of the Armenian Genocide and troubled that its
    approach toward Armenia - measured against the standard of past
    presidents, the special relationship that has long existed between
    our two countries, and the enduring ties and shared values that
    have historically brought together the American and Armenian
    peoples - has been, in our view, largely counterproductive,
    frequently unfriendly, and, at times, antagonistic.

    Closer to home, we remain troubled by the Administration's failure
    to reach out to and to meaningfully engage the Armenian American
    community. Rather than looking to the Armenian American community
    as a uniquely valuable source of regional understanding, a
    wellspring of civic activism, or a vital bridge to the future
    growth and expansion of our bilateral ties, the White House and
    State Department chose instead to dismiss those Americans who, by
    virtue of their heritage, feel most strongly about these very
    issues. At every key juncture since 2001, the Administration
    placed artificial obstacles in the way of greater Armenian American
    participation in and support for the formulation and implementation
    of balanced and constructive policies toward Armenia and the
    surrounding region. This approach in our view reflects both a
    missed opportunity and an unfortunate symbol of an Administration
    that lacks the confidence to engage with its citizens and answer
    openly for the policies it advances in the name of all Americans.

    We have, as you know, in a series of letters over the past seven
    years, shared our concerns regarding a broad array of Armenian
    American issues, thirteen of which we have listed below in the text
    of this correspondence. We have repeatedly noted that the
    Administration's policy of active complicity in Turkey's denial of
    the Armenian Genocide represents both a moral outrage against
    America's core values, and a shameful retreat, under foreign
    pressure, from our nation's proud legacy as the world's leading
    defender of human rights. This moral failing has, of course, only
    been compounded by the Administration's strident opposition to the
    Armenian Genocide Resolution and the State Department's firing of
    U.S. Ambassador to Armenia, John Marshall Evans, for simply
    speaking truthfully about this atrocity.

    We have the right to expect more from our government. America
    should never hide from the truth, no matter how "inconvenient" it
    may seem at the time to stand up for our values. History has
    taught us that we should never compromise our nation's values or
    allow a foreign country to impose a gag-rule on our defense of
    human rights.

    The Administration has also failed, over the past seven years, to
    stand by Armenia or, with the sole exception of Armenia's
    participation in the Millennium Challenge Account, a merit-based
    program, to take meaningful steps to strengthen the U.S.-Armenia
    relationship. This performance is perhaps most notably illustrated
    by the consistent attempts by the White House and Department of
    State to sharply reduce U.S. economic aid levels, the "mistaken"
    listing in 2003 of Armenia as a terrorist watch country, and, of
    course, by the conspicuous refusal by President Bush to either
    visit Armenia or to officially invite the President of Armenia to
    the White House.

    Equally troubling has been the Administration's silence or even
    acquiescence in the face of the regional threats faced by the
    people of Armenia and Nagorno Karabagh. Among our concerns in this
    area, as reflected below, are the Administration's unwarranted
    waiver of Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act, its abandonment
    of its own Military Aid Parity Agreement, its support for taxpayer
    financing of the Baku-Ceyhan bypass of Armenia, its failure to
    maintain a balanced policy toward Nagorno Karabagh, and - perhaps
    most notably - the absence of any meaningful effort to pressure
    either Turkey or Azerbaijan to end their illegal blockades.

    Finally, we are profoundly troubled that, over the course of the
    past seven years, despite repeated requests, neither our President
    nor our Secretary of State chose to meet with the leadership of our
    community to solicit our views, to share the rationale behind your
    policies, or to engage in an open and honest discussion about
    America's future relationship with Armenia and the region. In
    light of the fact that we have not had an opportunity to meet, we
    would like to share with you the following areas in which we have
    been troubled by the shortcomings of the Administration's policies
    and actions:

    1) The President's broken campaign pledge to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide

    Almost immediately after taking office, President Bush abandoned
    his campaign pledge to recognize the Armenian Genocide. Rather
    than honoring this promise and keeping his word, the President has,
    in his annual April 24th statements, used evasive and euphemistic
    terminology to avoid describing Ottoman Turkey's systematic and
    deliberate destruction of the Armenian people by its proper name -
    the Armenian Genocide. Moreover, the Administration has
    unconscionably echoed the Turkish government's denial by claiming
    that the Armenian Genocide, one of the most studied genocides of
    the 20th century, "should be a matter of historical inquiry, not
    legislation."

    As you recall, on March 21st of last year, during a hearing of the
    House Appropriations Subcommittee on State-Foreign Operations, you
    refused to answer questions, posed by Congressman Adam Schiff, as
    to whether the murder of 1.5 million Armenians could be
    characterized as anything other than a genocide. Later that year,
    on October 17th, after the Foreign Affairs Committee passed the
    Armenian Genocide Resolution, the President, from the lawn of the
    White House, argued that, "one thing Congress should not be doing
    is sorting out the historical record of the Ottoman Empire,"
    claiming there was "more important work to do."

    2) Opposition to the Congressional Genocide Resolution

    The Bush Administration, throughout its tenure, has actively sought
    to block the adoption of the Genocide Resolution in both the House
    and Senate. As recently as October of last year, the President
    spoke to the national media from the White House against the
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide, and, giving into the
    blackmail and threats of Turkey, personally lobbied Members of
    Congress to prevent the commemoration of this crime. We are
    particularly saddened that you personally lobbied against the
    resolution, as did Secretary of Defense Gates, and remain troubled
    by the truly unprecedented level of participation by the nation's
    most senior leadership in a foreign government's campaign to defeat
    human rights legislation in the U.S. Congress.

    3) The Evans firing and the Hoagland nominations

    The Bush Administration fired U.S. Ambassador John Evans, a career
    Foreign Service officer with 35 years of experience, simply for
    speaking truthfully about the Armenian Genocide. Despite numerous
    Congressional inquiries, the Administration continuously attempted
    to cover up the true reasons for his removal and the Turkish
    government's protests over his statements. When the American
    Foreign Service Association (AFSA) awarded John Evans the Christian
    Herter prize for constructive dissent, Administration officials
    forced AFSA to rescind the award just days before Turkish President
    Erdogan came to Washington, DC to meet with the President.

    The President's nominee to replace Ambassador Evans, Dick Hoagland,
    denied the Armenian Genocide in his written responses to Senate
    inquiries during his confirmation process. After being blocked by
    a Senatorial "hold" placed by Robert Menendez in the 109th
    Congress, the President again nominated Ambassador Hoagland, only
    to have this nomination blocked once again on the grounds that a
    diplomat who denies the Armenian Genocide cannot serve effectively
    as the U.S. representative to Armenia.

    4) The waiver of Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act

    The Bush Administration, in 2001, aggressively pressured Congress
    into granting the President the authority to waive Section 907, a
    provision of law that bars aid to the government of Azerbaijan
    until it lifts its blockades of Armenia and Nagorno Karabagh.
    President Bush has subsequently used this authority to provide
    direct aid, including military assistance, to the government of
    Azerbaijan, despite their outrageous and escalating threats of
    renewed war and their continued violation of the provisions of this
    law.

    5) Reduction in aid to Armenia

    In the face of the devastating, multi-billion dollar impact of the
    Turkish and Azerbaijani blockades on the Armenian economy,
    President Bush has, in each of his years in office, proposed to
    Congress that Freedom Support Act humanitarian and developmental
    aid to Armenia be reduced. The President's most recent economic
    aid request, for Fiscal Year 2009, was $24 million, dramatically
    less than the $91.5 million, when he came into office in Fiscal
    Year 2001. Furthermore, for Fiscal Year 2009, the President's
    budget proposed either maintaining or increasing aid to every
    former Soviet Republic, except Armenia, for which the President
    recommended a 59% decrease in aid.

    6) Abandonment of the military aid parity agreement

    The Bush Administration broke its word and abandoned its November
    2001 agreement with Congress and the Armenian American community to
    maintain even levels of military aid to Armenia and Azerbaijan. In
    successive budgets submitted to Congress, the President effectively
    sought to tilt the regional military balance in favor of
    Azerbaijan, undermining the role of the U.S. as an impartial
    mediator, despite Azerbaijan's increasingly violent threats of
    renewed aggression.

    7) Mistaken listing of Armenia as a terrorist country

    The Bush Administration sought, unsuccessfully, in December of
    2002, to place Armenia on an Immigration and Naturalization Service
    watch list for terrorist countries. This obvious error was reversed
    only after a nation-wide protest campaign. Neither the White House
    nor the Department of Justice has ever apologized for the offense
    caused by this mistake, choosing, instead, to attempt to justify
    what is broadly perceived as an effort to pander to Turkey by
    vilifying Armenia.

    8) Lack of U.S.-Armenia Presidential visitations

    The President neither visited Armenia nor did he invite the
    President of Armenia to visit the United States, despite similar
    visits by the leaders of Georgia and Azerbaijan.

    9) Failure to confront the desecration of the Djulfa cemetery

    The Administration again illustrated its lack of willingness to
    confront anti-Armenian violence and aggression in its lack of a
    meaningful response to the desecration, in December of 2005, of an
    ancient Armenian cemetery by Azerbaijani soldiers. As documented
    on videotape and in photos that were promptly shared with the State
    Department following the incident, approximately 200 troops using
    sledgehammers and picks systematically destroyed hundreds of
    khatchkars (intricately carved stone-crosses) in the cemetery in
    the Djulfa region of Nakhichevan. This sacred, 1,200-year old site
    of the Armenian Apostolic Church, once home to as many as 10,000
    khatchkars, is now nearly entirely destroyed, and has, in fact,
    recently been converted into a firing range by the Azerbaijani
    military.

    Despite repeated and sustained attempts on our part, calls for an
    investigation by International Christian Concern and other civic
    and faith-based groups, and a series of Congressional inquiries,
    the Administration, which has otherwise and elsewhere trumpeted it
    defense of religious freedoms, remained silent for several months,
    until March of the following year, when a State Department official
    finally condemned the desecration in response to an inquiry at a
    press conference in Yerevan. The 2006 State Department
    International Religious Freedom Report does not mention this widely
    reported demolition, although it does detail desecrations of other
    cemeteries in several other countries, such as in Estonia, France,
    Latvia, Poland, Lithuania and Germany.

    10) Failure to maintain a balanced policy on Nagorno Karabagh

    The Bush Administration, to its credit, took an early initiative to
    help resolve the Nagorno Karabagh issue in the form of the Key West
    summit meeting in 2001 between Secretary of State Powell and the
    presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan. After Azerbaijan's failure to
    honor its Key West commitments, however, the Administration failed
    to hold Azerbaijan accountable for unilaterally stalling the
    Nagorno Karabagh peace process. The negative impact of our
    unbalanced policy toward this conflict was compounded last year by
    the publication, in the State Department's annual Human Rights
    report, of inaccurate official claims that Armenia occupies Nagorno
    Karabagh and Azerbaijan. Although this error was not repeated in
    this year's report, it did represent a setback to the peace process
    and undermined our role as an honest broker in this conflict.

    11) Taxpayer financing of the Baku-Ceyhan bypass of Armenia

    The Bush Administration, despite bipartisan Congressional
    opposition, supported American taxpayer-funded subsidies for the
    politically motivated Baku-Ceyhan pipeline route that, at the
    insistence of both Turkey and Azerbaijan, bypassed Armenia, to its
    significant economic detriment.

    12) Failure to effectively pressure Turkey and Azerbaijan to end
    their blockades

    The Bush Administration has not forcefully condemned the Turkish
    and Azerbaijani blockades as clear violations of international law,
    nor, outside of occasional public statements, has it taken any
    meaningful steps to pressure the Turkish or Azerbaijani governments
    to end their illegal border closures against land-locked Armenia.

    13) Neglect of relations with the Armenian American community

    Breaking with the tradition of the last several Administrations,
    President Bush and his Secretaries of State failed to reach out in
    any meaningful way to our nation's one and a half million citizens
    of Armenian heritage. Over the past seven years, the collective
    leadership of the Armenian American community was neither invited
    to the White House to consult with the President, or asked by the
    Secretary of State to meet and discuss our community's priorities.

    We would welcome the opportunity for the collective leadership of
    the Armenian American community to meet with you to discuss each of
    these issues, and others, in greater detail. We are confident
    that, if such a meeting can be arranged, we would benefit
    considerably from your insights and perspectives, and that,
    together, we will be able to explore ways in which we can work
    together toward our shared aims during the coming months.

    Thank you for your review of our concerns and for your
    consideration of our request.

    Sincerely,

    [signed]
    Kenneth V. Hachikian
    Chairman
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