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White House gives in on Armenia envoy

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  • White House gives in on Armenia envoy

    LA Times, CA
    Aug 4 2007


    White House gives in on Armenia envoy
    It pulls the nomination of Richard Hoagland. Senate objected because
    he wouldn't call mass killings by Turks 'genocide.'
    By Paul Richter, Times Staff Writer
    August 4, 2007


    WASHINGTON - The White House on Friday formally withdrew its nominee
    for ambassadorship to Armenia, yielding to senators who opposed the
    candidate because he refused to call World War I-era killings of
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks a genocide.

    The move came after the nominee, Richard E. Hoagland, a career
    foreign service officer, asked President Bush in a letter to drop the
    effort, saying he believed there was no longer any chance the Senate
    would confirm his selection.

    The administration submitted Hoagland's nomination to the Senate in
    2006, and again in January. But opposition quickly took shape because
    in his confirmation hearing Hoagland, following administration
    policy, deplored the killings but avoided using the word "genocide."

    Turkey, an important U.S. ally, views the word as provocative and
    inaccurate and has insisted that the deaths of 1.2 million Armenians
    in the last years of the Ottoman Empire were not acts of genocide.

    The mass killings are an increasingly contentious issue between
    Congress and the Bush administration, and between the United States
    and Turkey.

    A majority of members of the House is now on record favoring a
    pending resolution that would officially recognize the 1915-1923
    killings as genocide. But Turkey, whose help the administration needs
    in the Middle East, has been lobbying against the measure, warning
    that it would further alienate the Turkish public.

    Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), who had used a parliamentary tactic
    called a "hold" to block the nomination, said, "We're obviously
    pleased that the administration came to understand that I had no
    intention of withdrawing my hold."

    He said he hoped the new nominee would be "somebody who understands
    the reality of the Armenian genocide and can express himself or
    herself when the time comes for a nomination hearing."

    Lawmakers and Armenian American activists had been watching the
    nomination closely after the administration last year removed the
    previous U.S. ambassador to Armenia, John M. Evans, for calling the
    killings genocide.

    U.S. officials said they expected Hoagland to be nominated for
    another post soon. Bush believes Hoagland "would have done a
    wonderful job, and thanks him for his willingness to serve his
    country," said Emily A. Lawrimore, a White House spokeswoman.

    The administration did not identify its choice for the next nominee.
    But officials said they had not shifted their position on the
    genocide issue, raising the possibility that the impasse between the
    administration and Congress would continue.

    Hoagland has been in the foreign service for two decades. He was
    ambassador to Tajikistan, and he has served in Russia, in several
    posts in central and South Asia, and in staff posts in Washington.
    The White House nominated Hoagland in the fall to replace Evans, who
    left Armenia in September after two years on the job.

    Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Pasadena) said the administration had erred badly
    in adopting a view of the Armenian killings "to mollify an ally." He
    said it was "bad enough" that the administration had evaded the truth
    on the deaths of 1.2 million Armenians and "even worse when they
    fired a career diplomat for speaking the truth."

    Rep. Frank J. Pallone Jr. (D-N.J.), co-chairman of the Congressional
    Caucus on Armenian Issues, said Hoagland not only avoided the word
    genocide, but "seems to go out of his way to suggest that genocide
    never occurred and that we shouldn't speak out against it. Somebody
    like that can't effectively serve as ambassador to Armenia; this
    issue is such an important part of your task."

    In a recent poll by the Pew Research Center, 9% of Turks held a
    favorable view of the U.S., a level considerably lower than in other
    Muslim areas, including the Palestinian territories.
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