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U.S. Ambassador To Armenia To Resign In September

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  • U.S. Ambassador To Armenia To Resign In September

    U.S. AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA TO RESIGN IN SEPTEMBER

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    Aug. 22, 2006

    YEREVAN, August 22 (RIA Novosti) - America's ambassador to Armenia
    announced Tuesday he would be leaving his post in September, after
    only two years on the job.

    John Evans, who was sworn in as ambassador in August 2004, courted
    controversy in 2004 and 2005 for public comments he made on the 1915
    Ottoman Empire's massacre of ethnic Armenians, which the United States
    neither denies nor officially recognizes as genocide.

    Evans, who was publicly rebuked by the State Department, said: "The
    Armenian Genocide was the first genocide of the twentieth century."

    The ambassador later said he was expressing his personal viewpoint
    and not the position of the United States government.

    While the U.S. State Department has said the ambassador's resignation
    was not related to his comments, some members of the Senate Foreign
    Relations Committee have expressed doubt.

    Last month, Senators Joe Biden (D-DE) and Christopher Dodd (D-CT) sent
    separate letters to U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice expressing
    concern that the ambassador was fired for articulating a view of the
    Armenian massacre not in keeping with administration policy.

    The American-Armenian community has also expressed misgivings.

    Armenian Assembly of America Executive Director Bryan Ardouny said:
    "We have a fundamental policy disagreement with the administration,
    and we will not stop work until the U.S. unequivocally affirms the
    Armenian genocide."

    On May 23, U.S. President George Bush named Richard Hoagland to
    replace Evans as American ambassador to Yerevan. But the Senate's
    Foreign Relations Committee has postponed considering his candidacy
    until September.

    Testifying before a committee meeting in July, Hoagland, a career
    Foreign Service officer and the current U.S. ambassador to Tajikistan,
    said: "The State Department has not directed me to make or avoid
    specific statements about the tragic events that occurred at the end
    of the Ottoman Empire."

    "The U.S. believes that the question of how to characterize these
    horrific events is of such enormous human significance that it should
    not be determined on the basis of politics, but through heartfelt
    introspection among academics, civic leaders and societies," he said.
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