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  • ANCA Sets Record Straight

    ANCA SETS RECORD STRAIGHT

    http://www.asbarez.com/2010/02/anca-sets -record-straight/
    Feb 12th, 2010

    Nation's Largest Armenian-American Grassroots Organization Issues
    Statement on Proposed Meeting With Secretary of State Hillary Clinton

    The Armenian National Committee of America stands for open and
    inclusive community representation.

    It is in this spirit that the ANCA has consistently worked to foster
    direct Armenian American dialogue with America's leaders, not simply
    for ourselves or for those who share our perspectives, but for all
    the leading organizations that, together, represent the rich fabric
    of our community.

    Such an approach reflects both our deep respect for our community's
    diversity and our equally profound belief in our community's unity
    of purpose on the central challenges facing the Armenian nation.

    Unfortunately, recent developments - related to a proposed community
    meeting with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton - have shown, that some
    others who strive to speak in our community's name do not share this
    faith in our community's basic decency, devotion, and common sense.

    The controversy surrounding this meeting, while unnecessary and
    counterproductive, has, at the very least, served some useful purpose
    in providing our community with new insights into the significant
    distinctions between the ANCA and the Armenian Assembly - distinctions
    that reflect fundamentally different approaches to advocacy.

    The ANCA operates as an inclusive organization, reaching deep into
    our community, building consensus around shared values, and bringing
    people together across all of our geographic, demographic, religious,
    and civic affiliations. The Assembly, by way of contrast, operates in
    an exclusive manner, representing a small and increasingly isolated
    circle, largely gathered around a single major benefactor. These
    differences matter. They impact how our two groups work and the results
    that we achieve on issues ranging from our core advocacy agenda to the
    waiver of Section 907, the Turkish Armenian Reconciliation Commission,
    the Hoagland nomination and the Turkey- Armenia Protocols. Nowhere are
    these differences more evident today than in how the ANCA and Assembly,
    with the support of leaders of the Armenian General Benevolent Union,
    have handled the proposed meeting with Secretary Clinton.

    While the Armenian Assembly has, throughout this process, coveted its
    access to the powerful by seeking to control and limit participation
    in this meeting, the ANCA has eagerly offered to share its place
    at the table with all our community partners. We understand, as a
    grassroots group, that our community grows stronger by opening doors
    to dialogue, not by closing them. We add to our power, respect and
    influence, not by who we exclude, but by broadening the scope and
    depth of civic engagement by all aspects of our community.

    Provided below are the facts of this matter, all drawn from the ANCA's
    public record of advocacy on behalf of Armenian Americans:

    ====================================== ======================

    The ANCA has, since the days leading up to President Barack Obama's
    inauguration, openly and consistently sought to schedule opportunities
    for a broad representation of the Armenian American community to
    meet personally with the President and also with Secretary of State
    Hillary Rodham Clinton to discuss issues of concern to Armenian
    American voters.

    The Armenian Assembly, by way of contrast, refused to take part in the
    community-wide inaugural letter to President Obama, signed by over 20
    leadership organizations, and has, since then, only requested meetings
    for itself, the Armenian General Benevolent Union, the Diocese of the
    Armenian Church, and the Knights of Vartan. Each of these organizations
    represents a vital and valued voice, but they clearly do not represent
    a full cross-section of our community. Among the groups excluded by
    the Assembly and the AGBU were the Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church, the Armenian Catholic and Evangelical communities, the Armenian
    Relief Society, and other grassroots membership organizations.

    On August 20, 2009, the ANCA, in a letter that was subsequently
    released to the public, requested that Secretary Clinton schedule a
    "personal meeting between you and the Armenian American community's
    civic, religious, and charitable leaders." This request was restated
    in an ANCA letter to the Secretary, dated September 30, 2009, and
    in a series of subsequent ANCA meetings with senior Administration
    officials. The ANCA's efforts to secure a community-wide leadership
    meeting with the Secretary was also supported by several members of
    Congress, most notably Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who, in an
    October 20, 2009 letter, specifically called upon Secretary Clinton "to
    meet directly with Armenian American groups" to discuss the "serious
    nature of the community's concerns" about the Turkey-Armenia Protocols.

    On November 17, 2009, the ANCA, upon learning from Administration
    officials that a meeting with Secretary Clinton was in the process
    of being arranged, sent letters to a broad-based group of more
    than 20 Armenian American leadership organizations - including the
    Armenian Assembly and the AGBU - alerting them to this development and
    recommending that "we coordinate among ourselves, in the days leading
    up to such a meeting, to ensure that our community delivers a unified
    message and establishes a clear and commonly-held set of expectations
    for Secretary Clinton and the Obama-Biden Administration." The letter
    also suggested that the groups "meet together prior to any such meeting
    to make arrangements for a productive exchange with the Secretary."

    On January 8, 2010, the ANCA was formally invited to meet with
    Secretary Clinton and was informed that the four other groups
    invited to this consultation were the Armenian Assembly of America,
    the Armenian General Benevolent Union, the Diocese of the Armenian
    Church (Eastern and Western U.S.), and the Knights of Vartan.

    On January 11, 2010, the ANCA wrote a letter to Secretary Clinton,
    the contents of which we immediately shared publicly with the Armenian
    American community, calling upon her to broaden her initial round
    of five invitations in order to ensure an open and inclusive meeting
    that allowed for full expression of the Armenian American perspective.

    In this letter, the ANCA made the following points:

    - The ANCA has long sought to arrange meetings for the community's
    traditional leadership with the Secretary of State, consistent with
    the President's campaign pledge to lead an Administration that actively
    engages Armenian American leaders.

    - The ANCA's aim in seeking such meetings is to help ensure that
    America's leaders benefit from an open dialogue with our community
    regarding U.S. policy on Armenian issues, particularly those, such
    as the Protocols, that directly impact the rights of U.S. citizens
    of Armenian heritage.

    - The ANCA believes that meetings of this nature should include the
    community's broad-based advocacy, civic, religious, and charitable
    leadership, not simply those that hold a particular point of view -
    on the Protocols, or any other issue.

    - The exclusion of many important groups in the Secretary's initial
    round of invitations, including a large number aligned against the
    State Department-supported Protocols, sets a dangerous precedent that,
    in the future, invitations for such meetings will be, in large part,
    reserved for those who endorse the Administration's policies.

    - The five organizations in the Secretary's first round of
    invitations represent a partial and unrepresentative sample of the
    Armenian American community's traditional leadership. This broader
    group, comprised of advocacy, civic, religious, charitable, and
    other organizations, met with President Clinton in 1994 and has,
    collectively, signed a series of letters to the White House over
    the past two decades, including as recently as President Obama's
    inauguration.

    In the days and weeks since the Secretary's invitation, the ANCA has
    sought, both publicly and privately, to work with the Department of
    State and with our community partners to reach a fair, inclusive,
    and workable solution. We have, in these efforts, faced considerable
    interference and opposition from the Assembly and leaders of the AGBU,
    but remain confident that we will succeed in ensuring that the Armenian
    American community's views are accurately and assertively represented
    to Secretary Clinton and the entire U.S. government.
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