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'Genocide' At Center Of Confirmation

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  • 'Genocide' At Center Of Confirmation

    'GENOCIDE' AT CENTER OF CONFIRMATION
    by Michael Doyle

    Fresno Bee (California)
    June 19, 2008 Thursday

    The career diplomat nominated to serve as the next U.S. ambassador
    to Armenia almost certainly will avoid using the phrase "Armenian
    genocide" at her Senate confirmation hearing today.

    The big question, closely watched by Armenian-American activists,
    is whether the Senate will still let nominee Marie Yovanovitch take
    her post in Yerevan.

    On Wednesday, Yovanovitch's State Department boss made it clear that
    Bush administration officials will continue steering away from the
    genocide term when referring to the mass killings and forced exiles
    that occurred in the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923. By some counts,
    upward of 1.5 million Armenians died.

    "The United States and the president have never denied any of the
    events," Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried told the House
    Foreign Affairs Committee on Wednesday, but "we do not use the term
    genocide to describe them."

    Fried said it would be diplomatically imprudent to use a word that
    incites considerable anger in Turkey, a vital U.S. military ally.

    "We don't use the term genocide, because we don't think the use of
    the term would lead to a reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey,"
    Fried said.

    Last year, Turkish leaders warned of dire diplomatic and military
    consequences if the House of Representatives approved a nonbinding
    Armenian genocide resolution. In an embarrassing defeat for House
    Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., the resolution -- which once seemed
    on the brink of passing -- stalled after more than two dozen House
    members withdrew their support.

    The resolution is now in limbo, with no sign that it will be
    resurrected anytime soon. Politically, that leaves the confirmation
    of the next U.S. ambassador to Armenia the primary battleground over
    the genocide issue.

    Bush nominated Yovanovitch in March to fill a position that's been
    vacant since 2006. The 1980 Princeton graduate previously served as
    U.S. ambassador to the Kyrgyz Republic.

    The last permanent U.S. ambassador to Armenia, John Evans, was recalled
    in 2006 after he told audiences in Fresno, Los Angeles and the San
    Francisco Bay Area that he had concluded that the 1915-1923 events
    amounted to genocide. The Senate refused to confirm the first diplomat
    nominated to replace Evans, Richard Hoagland, over genocide questions.

    "Denying a traumatic event such as genocide, one cannot create, nor
    implement, honest and effective diplomacy," Rep. Jim Costa, D-Calif.,
    advised Yovanovitch in writing earlier this year.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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