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White House Loses Fight for Armenia Ambassador

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  • White House Loses Fight for Armenia Ambassador

    The Moscow Times, Russia
    Aug 6 2007


    White House Loses Fight for Armenia Ambassador

    By Harry Dunphy


    WASHINGTON -- The White House gave in to Democratic Party objections
    and on Friday withdrew the nomination of a career diplomat to be
    ambassador to Armenia.

    Senator Robert Menendez placed a hold on the nomination of Richard
    Hoagland for the second time in January because of Hoagland's refusal
    to call the World War I-era killings of Armenians a genocide.

    A hold is a parliamentary privilege accorded to senators that
    prevents a nomination from going forward to a confirmation hearing.

    Hoagland's confirmation was blocked by Senate Democrats in the last
    Congress, and U.S. President George W. Bush's administration
    resubmitted his name in January when the new Congress convened.

    Republican California congressman Adam Schiff supported the Bush
    administration's decision to withdraw Hoagland's name.

    "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 Armenian
    people and, especially, the few remaining survivors of the first
    genocide of the 20th Century," Schiff said. "I hope the president
    will soon nominate a new ambassador who will be more forthcoming in
    discussing the Armenian genocide.


    Hoagland's predecessor, John Evans, reportedly had his tour of duty
    in Armenia cut short because, in a social setting, he referred to the
    killings as a genocide.

    In urging the administration to submit another candidate, Menendez, a
    Democrat, said "the State Department and the Bush administration are
    just flat-out wrong in their refusal to recognize the Armenian
    genocide. It is well past time to drop the euphemisms, the wink-wink,
    nod-nod brand of diplomacy that overlooks heinous atrocities around
    the world."

    He said Friday that the Bush administration did a disservice to the
    Armenian people and Armenian-Americans when it removed Evans "simply
    because he recognized the Armenian genocide."

    "It was clear that their nominee to fill his place was
    controversial," Menendez said. "I hope that our next nominee will
    bring a different understanding to this issue and foster a productive
    relationship with our friends in Armenia."

    The Bush administration has warned that even a congressional debate
    on the genocide question could damage relations with Turkey, a
    moderate Muslim nation that is a NATO member and an important
    strategic ally.

    Turkey has adamantly denied claims by scholars that its predecessor
    Ottoman state killed Armenians in a planned genocide. Turkey says the
    killings occurred at a time of civil conflict and that the casualty
    figures are inflated. (AP)
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