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Senators Obama, Boxer And Others To Submit Written Questions

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  • Senators Obama, Boxer And Others To Submit Written Questions

    SENATORS OBAMA, BOXER AND OTHERS TO SUBMIT WRITTEN QUESTIONS

    A1+
    [01:08 pm] 20 June, 2008

    WASHINGTON, DC - Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) castigated the Bush
    Administration's policy of Armenian Genocide denial, today,
    dramatically pressing U.S. Ambassadorial nominee to Armenia Marie
    Yovanovitch regarding the Administration's refusal to properly
    characterize Ottoman Turkey's systematic destruction of its Armenian
    population as a genocide, reported the Armenian National Committee
    of America (ANCA).

    The Associated Press, in an article today entitled "Nominee Refuses to
    Call Killings Genocide," noted Senator Menendez's "intense questioning"
    and the "prosecutorial style" of his inquiries during the Senate
    Foreign Relations Committee confirmation hearing. The AP article,
    which was also carried by MSNBC and other media outlets, quoted ANCA
    Executive Director Aram Hamparian as saying, after the hearing, that,
    "we were troubled by Ambassador Yovanovitch's refusal to offer any
    meaningful rationale for the Administration's ongoing complicity in
    Turkey's denials."

    Sen. Menendez, who had placed two consecutive holds on previous
    ambassadorial nominee Dick Hoagland for denying the Armenian Genocide,
    meticulously questioned Yovanovitch by presenting historical State
    Department documents from the time of the Genocide and comparing
    those statements with her opening remarks.

    "The US 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,"
    said Yovanovich in her opening testimony.

    Following these remarks, Sen. Menendez presented the nominee with
    several documents quoting U.S. Ambassadors to the Ottoman Empire
    Henry Morgethau and John Elkus, and other U.S. diplomats who served
    in the region at the time of the Armenian Genocide and documented
    the destruction of the Armenian population.

    Juxtaposing the eyewitness accounts of these U.S. officials with the
    definition of the crime as outlined by the U.N. Convention on the
    Punishment and Prevention of the Crime of Genocide, Sen. Menendez
    asked whether the President's annual April 24th remarks, Yovanovich's
    prepared statements, and her responses regarding U.S. diplomatic
    reporting matched the U.N. Convention, to which the U.S. is a party.

    Amb. Yovanovich sidestepped this question, stating instead that it is
    the President and the State Department who set the policy of defining
    historic events. In her testimony, she publicly confirmed that "It has
    been President Bush's policy, as well as that of previous presidents
    of both parties, not to use that term."

    Sen. Menendez responded, "It is a shame that career foreign service
    officers have to be brought before the Committee and find difficulty
    in acknowledging historical facts, and find difficulty in acknowledging
    the realities of what has been internationally recognized." He went on
    to state, "And it is amazing to me that we can talk about millions,
    a million and a half human beings who were slaughtered, we can
    talk about those who were raped, we can talk about those who were
    forcibly pushed out of their country, and we can have presidential
    acknowledgements of that, but then we cannot call it what it is. It
    is a ridiculous dance that the Administration is doing on the use of
    the term genocide. It is an attempt to suggest that we don't want to
    strain our relationships with Turkey...

    I believe acknowledging historical facts as they are is a principal
    that is easily understood both at home and abroad. So while the
    Administration believes that this policy benefits us vis-a-vis our
    relationship with Turkey, I think they should also recognize that
    it hurts our relationship elsewhere and it tarnishes the United
    States' history of being a place where truth is spoken to power,
    and acknowledgment of our failures of the past make us stronger,
    not weaker; recognizing the evils of the past do not trap us, but
    they set us free."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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