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  • The Los Angeles Times: White House Has Not Shifted Its Position On A

    THE LOS ANGELES TIMES: WHITE HOUSE HAS NOT SHIFTED ITS POSITION ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Yerkir
    07.08.2007 17:05

    YEREVAN (YERKIR) - The White House administration has not yet
    identified its choice for the next nominee as US Ambassador to
    Armenia. Richard Hoagland is expected to be nominated for another
    post soon, Spokeswoman for the White House Emily Lawrimore said.

    "President Bush believes Hoagland would have done a wonderful job,
    and thanks him for his willingness to serve his country," she said,
    The Los Angeles Times reported, according to PanARMENIAN.Net. But
    the US administration has not shifted its position on the Armenian
    Genocide issue, the newspaper reports.

    The Los Angeles Times says US's refusal to recognize the Armenian
    Genocide is connected with the importance of American-Turkish relations
    and Turkey's support that Washington needs in the Middle East. The
    article reminds that 1.2 million Armenians were killed in the last
    years of the Ottoman Empire during the World War I, as fact that
    modern Turkey refuses to recognize.

    The cause of Richard Hoagland's withdrawal is in New Jersey Senator
    Robert Menendez's persistent refusal to agree on his nomination,
    since Hoagland did not recognize the events of 1915 as Armenian
    Genocide during his confirmation Senate hearings.

    "We are obviously pleased that the administration came to understand
    that I had no intention of withdrawing my hold. I hope 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," the congressman underscored.

    The Los Angeles Times also reminds that in a recent poll by the Pew
    Research Center, only 9% of Turks held a favorable view of the US.

    On August 3 the White House withdrew Richard Hoagland's candidacy as US
    Ambassador to Armenia after New Jersey Senator Robert Menendez twice
    placed a hold on his nomination, since R. Hoagland did not recognize
    events of 1915 as genocide during his confirmation hearings before
    the Senate. Former US Ambassador to Armenia John Evans was recalled
    in September of 2006 because he had publicly called the events of
    1915 genocide.
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