Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: New US Ambassador To Armenia Approved

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: New US Ambassador To Armenia Approved

    NEW US AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA APPROVED

    Today's Zaman
    Aug 4 2008
    Turkey

    The US Senate last week confirmed the George W. Bush administration's
    nominee for ambassador to Armenia after a delay by lawmakers who
    were unhappy with Marie Yovonovitch's refusal to accept so-called
    "genocide" claims.

    Armenian-American groups have been seeking to force the Bush
    administration to change its policy on the 1915 incidents,
    but Yovanovitch clearly adhered at her confirmation hearing in
    the Senate to the US policy of refusing to label the incidents as
    "genocide." Last year, the White House withdrew its nomination of
    career diplomat Richard Hoagland after one lawmaker blocked it in
    an objection to that policy. The post had remained vacant for two
    years. Armenia, with the backing of its diaspora, claims that up to
    1.5 million of its kin were slaughtered in orchestrated killings in
    1915. Turkey rejects the claims, saying that 300,000 Armenians along
    with at least as many Turks died in civil strife that emerged when
    the Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia.

    Washington has had no full-time ambassador in Yerevan since May 2006
    and attaches great importance to sending Yovanovitch there at a time
    of increasing Russian influence in the region and a worsening conflict
    over the development of nuclear arms with Iran, officials have said.

    In May 2006 Bush removed John Evans, the last ambassador to Armenia,
    who had openly described the Armenian killings as genocide, in
    violation of Washington's official policy. He then nominated career
    diplomat Hoagland for the post, but Senator Robert Menendez, a Democrat
    from New Jersey, blocked the nomination for failing to qualify the
    Armenian killings as genocide. Bush then proposed Yovanovitch, who
    also has declined to use the word "genocide."
Working...
X