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White House Expected To Announce Recess Appointments

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  • White House Expected To Announce Recess Appointments

    WHITE HOUSE EXPECTED TO ANNOUNCE RECESS APPOINTMENTS
    Laura Rozen

    http://www.politico.com/blogs/laurarozen/
    December 29, 2010

    Categories:Appointments, Senate, Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
    State Department, Turkey, White House

    The White House is expected to announce as soon as today the recess
    appointment of some ambassadors whose nominations were not confirmed
    by the outgoing 111th Congress, POLITICO has learned.

    Among those expected to be recess appointed to the job are Francis
    Ricciardone to be U.S. Ambassador to Turkey, diplomatic sources told
    POLITICO Wednesday on condition of anonymity.

    Ricciardone, most recently the former deputy U.S. ambassador in
    Afghanistan, and a former U.S. ambassador in Egypt, could not be
    immediately reached for comment. The White House did not respond to
    a query.

    Turkey has been without a U.S. ambassador since Amb. Jim Jeffrey was
    confirmed as the U.S. envoy to Iraq in August.

    Ricciardone's confirmation was the subject of a "hold" by former Sen.

    Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) who has retired from the Senate to become the
    governor of Kansas. Former Bush NSC Middle East hand Elliott Abrams
    had been critical of Ricciardone's alleged lack of enthusiasm for
    Bush's Egypt democracy efforts when Ricciardone served as U.S.

    ambassador in Cairo. But a leading Egyptian civil society activist
    Saad Ibrahim has praised Ricciardone's record in an interview with
    POLITICO, and recommended him for the Ankara job.

    Recess appointments last for one year beyond the remainder of the
    Congress's term. In addition, the White House could decide to resubmit
    the nominations during the 112th Congress.

    The U.S. is due to attend international Iran nuclear talks in Turkey
    late next month.

    Unclear is whether Obama will also recess appoint his nominee to be
    U.S. envoy to Azerbaijan, Matthew Bryza. Bryza's confirmation has been
    the subject of a "hold" by Sens. Barbara Boxer (D-Ca.) and Robert
    Menendez (D-N.J.) who placed it amid criticism of the appointment
    by the Armenian-American lobby group ANCA. Bryza, a career foreign
    service officer who served as deputy assistant secretary of state for
    Europe during the Bush administration, was praised however in a 2008
    letter from then Armenian foreign minister Vartan Oskanian.

    ANCA expressed disappointment earlier this month that outgoing House
    majority leader Nancy Pelosi did not bring up a resolution for a vote
    before the full House that would have condemned the Armenian genocide.

    The U.S. has been without an ambassador in Baku since the summer
    of 2009.




    From: A. Papazian
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