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Armenia And Turkey: Lobby Groups Opposing Confirmation Of Assistant

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  • Armenia And Turkey: Lobby Groups Opposing Confirmation Of Assistant

    ARMENIA AND TURKEY: LOBBY GROUPS OPPOSING CONFIRMATION OF ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE FOR CENTRAL ASIA AND CAUCASUS
    Joshua Kucera

    Eurasianet
    http://www.eurasianet.org
    April 23, 2009

    The nomination of a key State Department official responsible for
    Central Asia and the Caucasus is being held up because of concerns
    about his views on Turkish-Armenian relations.

    At the heart of the simmering controversy surrounding Philip Gordon's
    confirmation as assistant secretary of state for Europe and Eurasia is
    his comments on the mass killings and deportations of ethnic Armenians
    in Ottoman Turkey that occurred during the second decade of the 20th
    century. Since gaining independence in 1991, Armenia has pressed for
    international recognition of the tragedy as genocide. [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Gordon, a scholar at the Brookings Institution, had a confirmation
    hearing before a Senate committee on March 27. During that hearing,
    he declined to characterize the events of 1915, when an estimated 1.5
    million Armenians perished, as "genocide." Instead, he used the term
    "tragedy." He also said that he was concerned that a congressional
    resolution recognizing the Armenian genocide would "provoke a
    nationalistic backlash in Turkey."

    The Senate committee proceeded to endorse Gordon's nomination. But his
    responses did not sit well with Armenian-American lobby groups, which
    subsequently mobilized opposition among their allies in Congress. One
    senator has placed a hold on the nomination, and until the hold is
    removed, the full Senate will not be able to vote on the nomination.

    Senators do not have to identity themselves on a hold, but a Senate
    source told EurasiaNet that the member was John Ensign, a Republican
    from Nevada who has co-sponsored a congressional resolution on the
    genocide in the past. A spokesman from Ensign's office did not return
    calls and emails seeking comment.

    Prospects that the United States would officially recognize the 1915
    events as genocide have risen with the election of Barack Obama. Obama,
    during his presidential campaign, pledged to recognize the genocide
    if elected, although in a recent visit to Turkey he declined to use
    the word "genocide." [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    That disappointed Armenian lobby groups. Aram Hamparian, the executive
    director of the Armenian National Committee of America, said Obama's
    comments in Turkey represented "a missed opportunity." But he said
    that he was hoping for Obama to use the word "genocide" on April 24 --
    the day that Armenians traditionally remember the tragedy. "He has
    an opportunity to honor his pledge on [April 24]," Hamparian said.

    Representatives of Armenian lobby groups contend that Gordon's
    nomination was troubling and not in line with Obama's stated
    views. "Our concern is that his remarks, his writings and his responses
    to Senate questions during his confirmation process were markedly
    at odds with the president's record on the Armenian genocide,"
    Hamparian said "The president has said that the Armenian genocide
    should be recognized."

    The Armenian Assembly of America also urged Gordon to get his views
    in line with other members of the administration: "With President
    Obama, Vice President Biden and Secretary of State Clinton's clear
    and consistent record with respect to US affirmation of the Armenian
    Genocide, the Assembly expects that, if confirmed, Philip Gordon
    will fully embrace this important human rights policy position,"
    said Bryan Ardouny, executive director of the assembly.

    Gordon previously served in government in the administration of
    former president Bill Clinton, as director for European affairs at the
    National Security Council. During the presidential campaign, he served
    as head of the Europe team in Obama's group of foreign policy advisers.

    Recently, however, he has been a scholar at the Brookings Institution,
    and has written extensively on Turkey. As part of the confirmation
    process, Sen. Robert Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat, asked for
    details on foreign funding to Brookings. According to figures released
    by the think tank, since 2006 Brookings has received $200,000 from
    the Turkish Industrialists' and Businessmen's Association, $200,000
    from Sabanci University, $150,000 from the Eksiogullari Group (a
    construction company in Turkey), and $100,000 from the Dogan Yayin
    Holding Company, a media-entertainment conglomerate.

    Brookings, in a note attached to the spreadsheet listing the donations,
    said that the "primary funding for the work of Philip H. Gordon
    in 2006-2007 was provided by the Smith Richardson Foundation. From
    2007-2009 primary funding was provided to Mr. Gordon by the Norwegian
    Foreign Ministry, the Carnegie Foundation, the Rockefeller Brothers
    Fund, and the Brookings Endowment."

    Hamparian, of the ANCA, said the funding suggests that writings by
    Brookings scholars, including Gordon and Mark Parris, a former US
    ambassador to Turkey who also works at Brookings, are compromised.

    Melissa Skolfield, the vice president for communications at Brookings,
    responding to a EurasiaNet query via email, offered a spirited
    defense of the independence of the institution's analysis. "Brookings
    is committed to high-quality, independent research, and all of our
    scholars share that commitment," Skolfield said. "Our donors respect
    our independence to pose questions, search for answers and present
    our findings based on the facts."

    Menendez, a Democrat from New Jersey, posed a series of written
    questions about Armenian issues to Gordon. The ANCA provided Gordon's
    responses to the questions to EurasiaNet.

    In one question, Menendez asked "How does the non-use of the
    genocide term, as you have advocated, advance US efforts to promote
    Armenian-Turkish reconciliation?" Gordon responded: "I believe the
    United States should strongly support Armenian-Turkish reconciliation
    and avoid steps that could derail that process or discourage either
    party from participating in the ongoing dialogue."

    Editor's Link: Joshua Kucera is a Washington, DC,-based freelance
    writer who specializes in security issues in Central Asia, the Caucasus
    and the Middle East.
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