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Obama Bypasses Senate To Appoint 4 New Ambassadors To Countries Incl

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  • Obama Bypasses Senate To Appoint 4 New Ambassadors To Countries Incl

    OBAMA BYPASSES SENATE TO APPOINT 4 NEW AMBASSADORS TO COUNTRIES INCLUDING SYRIA, TURKEY
    MATTHEW LEE

    Associated Press
    December 29, 2010, 3:06 p.m.

    WASHINGTON (AP) - President Barack Obama has bypassed the U.S. Senate
    and directly appointed four new U.S. ambassadors whose nominations
    had been stalled or blocked by lawmakers for months.

    The White House announced Wednesday that Obama would use his power
    to make recess appointments to fill envoy posts to Azerbaijan, Syria
    and NATO allies Turkey and the Czech Republic.

    Recess appointments are made when the Senate is not in session and
    last only until the end of the next session of Congress. They are
    frequently used when Senate confirmation is not possible.

    Specific senators had blocked or refused to consider the confirmations
    of the nominees for various reasons, including questions about their
    qualifications. But in the most high-profile case, that of the new
    envoy to Syria, Robert Ford, a number of senators objected because
    they believed sending an ambassador to the country would reward it
    for bad behavior.

    The administration had argued that returning an ambassador to Syria
    after a five-year absence would help persuade Syria to change its
    policies regarding Israel, Lebanon and Iraq as well as its willingness
    to support extremist groups. Syria is designated a "state sponsor of
    terrorism" by the State Department.

    Former President George W. Bush's administration withdrew a full-time
    ambassador from Syria in 2005 after terrorism accusations and to
    protest the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik
    Hariri, killed in a Beirut truck bombing that his supporters blamed
    on Syria. Syria denied involvement.

    Obama nominated Ford, a career diplomat and a former ambassador to
    Algeria, to the post in February but his nomination stalled after
    his confirmation hearings and was never voted on.

    The other Obama nominees announced Wednesday are Matthew Bryza for
    Azerbaijan, Norman Eisen for the Czech Republic and Francis Ricciardone
    for Turkey.

    Bryza, a career diplomat, was opposed by some in the Armenian-American
    community because of comments he made in his previous position as
    deputy assistant secretary of state for European affairs while trying
    to negotiate an end to the Nargorno-Karabakh conflict between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan.

    The nomination of Ricciardone, another career diplomat who served as
    ambassador to Egypt during the Bush administration, had been held up by
    outgoing Sen. Sam Brownback, a Republican from Kansas, who had concerns
    about his work in promoting democracy while he was stationed in Cairo.

    The nomination of Eisen, a lawyer who has worked in the Obama White
    House on ethics and reform, was being held up by Sen. Charles Grassley,
    an Iowa Republican who said the nominee had made misrepresentations
    to Congress about the firing of a federal official.




    From: A. Papazian
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