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ANCA Welcomes White House Withdrawal of Hoagland Nomination

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  • ANCA Welcomes White House Withdrawal of Hoagland Nomination

    Armenian National Committee of America
    1711 N Street NW
    Washington, DC 20036
    Tel. (202) 775-1918
    Fax. (202) 775-5648
    Email [email protected]
    Internet www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    August 3, 2007
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    ANCA WELCOMES WHITE HOUSE WITHDRAWAL OF HOAGLAND NOMINATION AS US
    AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA

    -- Decision Follows Extensive ANCA Nationwide Campaign to Block
    Appointment of Genocide Denier as U.S. Envoy

    WASHINGTON, DC - Following a year of Armenian National Committee of
    America (ANCA) led Armenian American community opposition to the
    controversial appointment of an Armenian Genocide denier as U.S.
    envoy to Yerevan, the White House, today, announced the withdrawal
    of the nomination of Dick Hoagland as U.S. Ambassador to Armenia.

    "We are gratified to see that the Administration has finally come
    to recognize what the ANCA and the Armenian American community have
    understood for more than a year - that Dick Hoagland -- through his
    own words and action - disqualified himself as an effective
    representative of either American values or U.S. interests as U.S.
    Ambassador to Armenia," stated ANCA Executive Director Aram
    Hamparian. "We would like to thank Senator Menendez for his
    principled leadership in impressing upon the Administration that a
    genocide denier should never and must never represent the U.S. in
    Armenia."

    "This is certainly welcome news," stated Senator Robert Menendez
    (D-NJ). "It was clear that their nominee to fill his place was
    controversial. I hope that our next nominee will bring a different
    understanding to this issue and foster a productive relationship
    with our friends in Armenia."

    House Armenian Genocide resolution lead sponsor Rep. Adam Schiff
    (D-CA) concurred, stating "The President was right to withdraw Mr.
    Hoagland's nomination. During his confirmation hearings, Mr.
    Hoagland continued to deny that the massacre of a million and a
    half Armenians between 1915 and 1923 was genocide, thereby
    compounding the injury done to the Armenian people and, especially,
    the few remaining survivors of the first genocide of the Twentieth
    Century. I hope that the President will soon nominate a new
    ambassador who will be more forthcoming in discussing the Armenian
    Genocide"

    The ANCA first announced its opposition to the Hoagland appointment
    on July 18th, 2006. The decision followed written responses offered
    by the nominee to questions posed during his Senate confirmation
    hearing, which went far beyond the bounds of the Administration's
    already deeply flawed policy, actually calling into question the
    Armenian Genocide as a historical fact. During subsequent months
    tens of thousands of Armenian Americans participated in nationwide
    phone, letter-writing and ANCA WebFax campaigns urging the Senate
    to block the nomination.

    On September 12th, Sen. Menendez announced that he had placed a
    "hold" on the Hoagland nomination, citing the principled stand
    taken by former U.S. Ambassador John Evans, who was fired for
    speaking truthfully about the Armenian Genocide, underscoring his
    "great concerns that Mr. Hoagland's confirmation would be a step
    backward."

    Citing the opposition of the Armenian American community and the
    growing controversy within Congress surrounding the nomination,
    Senator Menendez was joined on December 1st by incoming Senate
    Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) in calling on President George W.
    Bush to withdraw the Hoagland nomination and propose a new
    candidate to serve in this important diplomatic post. They stressed
    that, in light of the broad-based concerns within Congress, the
    extensive media coverage this issue has received, and the strong
    stand of the Armenian American community against the nomination,
    "it would serve neither our national interests nor the U.S.-Armenia
    relationship to expect Ambassador-designate Hoagland to carry out
    his duties under these highly contentious and profoundly troubling
    circumstances."

    On December 8th of last year, after the Senate failed to confirm
    Hoagland, his nomination was returned to the President upon the
    adjournment of the 109th Congress. With the expiration of the
    Hoagland nomination, the President was free to offer a new
    candidate for this diplomatic posting in the 110th Congress, but
    chose instead to submit the same one, despite strong Congressional
    opposition to his confirmation. Sen. Menendez placed a second
    "hold" on the nomination on January 11, 2007.

    More than half of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and more
    than 60 U.S. Representatives have raised concerns about the
    Hoagland nomination and the State Department's refusal to explain
    the controversial firing of his predecessor, John Marshall Evans,
    for speaking truthfully about the Armenian Genocide. The Department
    of State has also failed to offer any meaningful explanation of the
    role that the Turkish government played in the Evans issue.

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