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  • Do Armenian Organizations In The U.S.A. Delay Their Approval Of U.S.

    DO ARMENIAN ORGANIZATIONS IN THE U.S.A. DELAY THEIR APPROVAL OF U.S. AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA?

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    15.07.2008 GMT+04:00

    Interests of the U.S.A. depend on more important issues rather than
    the recognition of "Great massacre" as genocide, which would urge
    Washington to reconsider her foreign policy.

    It is rather difficult to predict the results of the U.S. Senate's
    voting on the candidacy of U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Marie
    Yovanovitch. If we share the viewpoint of the Armenian Community in
    the U.S.A. in the person of the Armenian National Committee of America
    (ANCA), under the current Administration Armenia has no chances to
    have a U.S. Ambassador. "We remain troubled by Yovanovitch's evasive
    answers and her absolute refusal to offer anything approaching
    a reasonable or factually supportable explanation of the reasons
    behind Administration's misguided policy on the Armenian Genocide,"
    declared Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the ANCA.

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Hamparian is sure that the Armenian American
    community will never allow an Ambassador to Armenia who denies the
    Armenian Genocide. "Reputation of a nation is put at stake when
    demanding high-rank diplomats to lie or to distort the truth in
    compliance with the country's foreign policy. The policy of denying
    the Armenian Genocide, which is known to everyone, is a result of
    pressure exerted by the Turkish Government, which undermines our
    confidence," Hamparian noted. If the problem is in the use of the term
    "genocide", Hamparian is right. However, in the commission hearings
    Ambassador-Designate Marie Yovanovitch said exactly the following:
    "The U.S. government - and certainly I - acknowledges and mourns
    the mass killings, ethnic cleansing, and forced deportations that
    devastated over one and a half million Armenians at the end of the
    Ottoman Empire. The United States recognizes these events as one of the
    greatest tragedies of the 20th century, the "Medz Yeghern" or Great
    Calamity, as many Armenians refer to it. That is why every April the
    President honors the victims and expresses American solidarity with
    the Armenian people on Remembrance Day." How else could Yovanovitch
    characterize the events of 1915? She said more than she could,
    we suppose.

    In fact, the term "genocide" is missing in the statements of Marie
    Yovanovitch. However, it is quite logical, as it has been President
    Bush's policy, as well as that of previous presidents of both parties,
    not to use that term. It is quite possible that the pressure of the
    Turkish Government is too intense. But there are also the interests
    of the U.S.A., which depend on more important issues rather than
    the recognition of "Great massacre" as genocide, which would urge
    Washington to reconsider her foreign policy. Once again the Armenians
    pin their hopes on the U.S. Presidential candidate, who, in this
    particular case, is Barack Obama. But is there any guarantee that
    elected a president, Obama will repeat the words of Ronald Reagan on
    the Armenian Genocide?

    On May 24, 1920 President Woodrow Wilson referred to the Congress
    underlining the severe massacre and forced deportation that the
    Armenians experienced at the time of the World War I. The fact that
    the concept of Â"genocideÂ" did not exist at that time does not mean
    that massacre and deportation were not carried out then. On February
    9, 1916 based on the reports of Henry Morgenthau, U.S. Ambassador to
    the Ottoman Empire, the U.S. Senate signed a declaration on massacre
    and forced deportation of 1.5 million Armenians and on August 6,
    1919 the U.S. Congress passed a concurrent resolution.

    In the Congress documents the term "Armenian Genocide" appeared in 1975
    only. But then Turkey became a strategic ally of the U.S.A. against
    the USSR. American missiles and monitoring stations were installed
    right on the Armenian border, and U.S. foreign policy radically
    changed. Moreover, America began to openly support Israel against
    the Arabs, and the issue of recognizing or denying the Armenian
    Genocide was set aside. And now, when Yerevan is badly in need for a
    U.S. Ambassador, Armenian organizations delay their approval, which,
    by the way, is quite favorable to Turkey.

    The issue of appointing a new U.S. Ambassador to Armenia was also
    discussed at the meeting of RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian
    and U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. The RA Foreign
    Minister expressed hope that candidature of the new Ambassador
    would be soon confirmed, which would encourage development of the
    Armenian-U.S. relations.

    In her response to Senator Obama's written inquiry Marie Yovanovitch
    noted that the U.S. Embassy in Ankara is committed to working with
    the Government of Turkey on ways in which the atrocities of 1915
    can be studied. "Besides, the Administration is currently laying
    the groundwork for an International Visitor Program that would bring
    archivists from the Turkish State Archives to the U.S. to look at the
    ways in which we do historical research. As a confidence building
    measure, the U.S. Government has contacted Armenian archivists
    to participate in the program, in the hope that, upon return, the
    archivists from both countries could work together on a joint program
    that would study the issue.

    In addition, our Embassies in Armenia and Turkey take every opportunity
    in meetings with the Governments of these two countries, and with
    civil society leaders from both countries, to encourage improved
    dialogue between them," Yovanovitch concluded.

    --Boundary_(ID_wXZ4063CthsVxObzCiAgbg) --
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