Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Bush bows to pressure on Armenia envoy

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Bush bows to pressure on Armenia envoy

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Aug 6 2007


    Bush bows to pressure on Armenia envoy


    After a year-long confrontation, the White House bowed to pressure
    from the Armenian lobby, withdrawing its nomination of a career
    diplomat as ambassador in Yerevan, a development cheered by Armenian
    groups in the United States.



    The White House's nomination of Richard Hoagland was blocked in the
    last Congress and the Bush administration resubmitted his name in
    January when the new Congress convened. But a Democrat senator,
    Robert Menendez, placed a hold on the nomination for the second time
    in January because of Hoagland's refusal to call the World War I-era
    killings of Armenians "genocide." A hold is a parliamentary privilege
    accorded to senators that prevents a nomination from going forward to
    a confirmation hearing. Hoagland's predecessor, John Evans, had his
    tour of duty in Armenia cut short because, in a social setting, he
    referred to the killings as genocide.
    Turkey categorically rejects "genocide" charges and says Turks and
    Armenians were killed in internal strife when Armenians revolted
    against the Ottoman rule in eastern Anatolia in hope of carving out
    an independent state in collaboration with the invading Russian army.
    Ankara has warned the US that their ties would receive a serious blow
    if the two resolutions pending at Senate and the House of
    Representatives are passed.

    A California congressman, Republican 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
    a genocide, thereby compounding the injury done to Armenian people
    and, especially, the few remaining survivors of the first genocide of
    the 20th Century" said Schiff. "I hope the president will soon
    nominate a new ambassador who will be more forthcoming in discussing
    the Armenian genocide."

    In urging the administration to submit another candidate, Menendez
    said that "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 the Bush administration did a disservice to the
    Armenian people and Armenian-Americans when it removed Evans "simply
    because he recognized the Armenian genocide." He added: "I hope that
    our next nominee will bring a different understanding to this issue."

    Armenian groups in the US welcomed the withdrawal of Hoagland's
    nomination. The Armenian National Committee of America's (ANCA)
    Executive Director Aram Hamparian said: "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 actions --
    disqualified himself as an effective representative of either
    American values or US interests as US ambassador to Armenia."

    06.08.2007

    Today's Zaman with AP Ýstanbul
Working...
X