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  • Embassy Row: Recall from Armenia?

    Washington Times, DC
    March 31 2006

    Embassy Row
    By James Morrison
    March 30, 2006


    Recall from Armenia?


    Armenian-Americans and their allies in Congress are angered over
    reports that the U.S. ambassador to Armenia will be recalled or fired
    for referring to the killings of Armenians in 1915 as genocide and
    upsetting established U.S. policy that avoids using that word.
    Ambassador John Evans, a career Foreign Service officer,
    deliberately referred to the "Armenian genocide" in a speech last
    year in San Francisco, and rumors of official retaliation have
    persisted for the past 12 months.
    The State Department officially refers to the "massacre" of
    Armenians under the Ottoman Turkish Empire but has never described
    the conflict as a deliberate attempt to eliminate an entire race of
    people. The delicate subject also complicates U.S. relations with
    Turkey, a key NATO ally that insists no genocide occurred. Turkey
    says Armenians were killed in an uprising against the Ottomans and
    rejects demands for an apology from the modern Turkish state.
    Reps. Frank Pallone Jr., New Jersey Democrat and co-chairman of
    the Congressional Caucus on Armenia, Grace F. Napolitano and Adam B.
    Schiff, both California Democrats, have demanded an answer about Mr.
    Evans' future from Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
    In a March 11 letter to Miss Rice, Mr. Pallone expressed his
    "outrage that the State Department is recalling Ambassador Evans as
    retaliation for statements he made in recognition of the Armenian
    genocide. It is simply wrong for the State Department to punish
    Ambassador Evans for statements he made that are factually correct."
    Mrs. Napolitano, a senior member of the House International
    Relations Committee, asked, "Have State Department employees been
    directed not to use the word 'genocide' when discussing the
    extermination of 1.5 million Armenians starting in 1915?"
    Earlier this month, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack
    said he has no information about Mr. Evans' future. The ambassador
    has been in Armenia for nearly two years.
    "I'm not aware that we have recalled anybody," he said. "I
    believe that he's still serving as ambassador in Armenia."
    The Armenian National Committee of America also pressed Miss
    Rice.
    "The prospect that a U.S. envoy's posting -- and possibly his
    career -- has been cut short due to his honest and accurate
    description of a genocide is profoundly offensive to American
    values," committee Chairman Ken Hachikian said in a March 8 letter to
    Miss Rice.
    In his Feb. 19, 2005, speech, Mr. Evans told the Bay Area
    Armenian-American Community, "I will today call it the Armenian
    genocide. I think we, the U.S. government, owe you, our fellow
    citizens, a more frank and honest way of discussing the problem.
    Embassy Row
    By James Morrison
    March 30, 2006


    Recall from Armenia?
    Armenian-Americans and their allies in Congress are angered over
    reports that the U.S. ambassador to Armenia will be recalled or fired
    for referring to the killings of Armenians in 1915 as genocide and
    upsetting established U.S. policy that avoids using that word.
    Ambassador John Evans, a career Foreign Service officer,
    deliberately referred to the "Armenian genocide" in a speech last
    year in San Francisco, and rumors of official retaliation have
    persisted for the past 12 months.
    The State Department officially refers to the "massacre" of
    Armenians under the Ottoman Turkish Empire but has never described
    the conflict as a deliberate attempt to eliminate an entire race of
    people. The delicate subject also complicates U.S. relations with
    Turkey, a key NATO ally that insists no genocide occurred. Turkey
    says Armenians were killed in an uprising against the Ottomans and
    rejects demands for an apology from the modern Turkish state.
    Reps. Frank Pallone Jr., New Jersey Democrat and co-chairman of
    the Congressional Caucus on Armenia, Grace F. Napolitano and Adam B.
    Schiff, both California Democrats, have demanded an answer about Mr.
    Evans' future from Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
    In a March 11 letter to Miss Rice, Mr. Pallone expressed his
    "outrage that the State Department is recalling Ambassador Evans as
    retaliation for statements he made in recognition of the Armenian
    genocide. It is simply wrong for the State Department to punish
    Ambassador Evans for statements he made that are factually correct."
    Mrs. Napolitano, a senior member of the House International
    Relations Committee, asked, "Have State Department employees been
    directed not to use the word 'genocide' when discussing the
    extermination of 1.5 million Armenians starting in 1915?"
    Earlier this month, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack
    said he has no information about Mr. Evans' future. The ambassador
    has been in Armenia for nearly two years.
    "I'm not aware that we have recalled anybody," he said. "I
    believe that he's still serving as ambassador in Armenia."
    The Armenian National Committee of America also pressed Miss
    Rice.
    "The prospect that a U.S. envoy's posting -- and possibly his
    career -- has been cut short due to his honest and accurate
    description of a genocide is profoundly offensive to American
    values," committee Chairman Ken Hachikian said in a March 8 letter to
    Miss Rice.
    In his Feb. 19, 2005, speech, Mr. Evans told the Bay Area
    Armenian-American Community, "I will today call it the Armenian
    genocide. I think we, the U.S. government, owe you, our fellow
    citizens, a more frank and honest way of discussing the problem.
    "Today, as someone who has studied it, there's no doubt in my mind
    what happened. I think it is unbecoming of us, as Americans, to play
    word games here. I believe in calling things by their name."
    Upon his return to the U.S. Embassy in Armenia, Mr. Evans issued
    a correction that led many observers to speculate that he was under
    pressure from Washington.
    "Although I told my audience that the United States policy on the
    Armenian tragedy has not changed, I used the term 'genocide,'
    speaking in what I characterized as my personal capacity," he said.
    "That was inappropriate."
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