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  • Nomination Withdrawn

    NOMINATION WITHDRAWN
    By Ryan Vaillancourt

    Glendale News Press
    August 4, 2007

    Hoagland, who did not cite genocide, won't become the U.S. ambassador
    to Armenia.

    GLENDALE -- The White House announced Friday that its controversial
    nomination of Richard Hoagland for U.S. ambassador to Armenia has
    been withdrawn.

    Hoagland, the former U.S. ambassador to Tajikistan, was tapped by
    President Bush last year to replace former Ambassador John Marshall
    Evans after Evans was allegedly forced into early retirement in
    November 2006 for publicly referring to the Armenian genocide.

    After a Senate confirmation hearing last year, Hoagland came under
    fire from Armenian American political organizations for not recognizing
    the Armenian genocide.

    Hoagland's dismissal is being hailed as a major political coup for
    the Armenian American community, which has lobbied intensely for more
    than a year against his appointment, officials said.

    "The most important thing is the administration will learn the
    political message that in dealing with Armenian issues, they have to
    be more reasonable and accommodating and work with the community,"
    said Harut Sassounian, who, as publisher of the California Courier,
    a Glendale-based Armenian newspaper, reported Hoagland's imminent
    dismissal in a July 19 column. "If they don't, they'll pay a price
    for it, and in this case, Hoagland paid the price."

    Evans' 2005 comments about the genocide won him admiration from the
    Armenian American community, and the American Foreign Service Assn. --
    comprising current and former U.S. foreign service officers -- picked
    Evans to receive its "constructive dissent" award.

    But the State Department, which has not recognized the 1915 killings
    of Armenians by Ottoman Turks as genocide, ordered Evans to issue
    a retraction of his statements, and the American Foreign Service
    Assn. revoked the constructive dissent award on a technicality, Evans
    said during a March appearance on the Larry Zarian Forum in Glendale.

    Despite the retraction, Evans was forced by the State Department into
    early retirement after a career in foreign service, he said.

    Hoagland had already been chosen as Evans' successor in June, but
    his status in Washington has been in limbo for more than a year,
    due in large part to U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez, who twice placed a
    hold on Hoagland's nomination.

    A hold is a rarely used parliamentary procedure that allows a senator
    to delay certain appointments.

    That move afforded time for lobbyists to flood congressional offices
    with letters and phone calls in opposition to Hoagland's nomination,
    Sassounian said.

    "Richard Hoagland's nomination became tainted the moment he disclosed
    his position denying the historical veracity of the Armenian genocide,"
    Andrew Kzirian, executive director of the Armenian National Committee
    of America Western Region, said in a statement. "The Armenian American
    community of the western United States welcomes the administration's
    decision to withdraw the nomination and sincerely expresses gratitude
    to Sen. Robert Menendez for his leadership in this regard."

    Rep. Adam Schiff, whose district includes Glendale and Burbank,
    also saluted the White House move.

    "The president was right to withdraw Mr. Hoagland's nomination,"
    Schiff said in a statement. "I hope that the president will soon
    nominate a new ambassador who will be more forthcoming in discussing
    the Armenian genocide."

    White House officials said Hoagland submitted a letter of withdrawal
    this week to the president, which the president "accepted."

    "The president, obviously, claims he would have been a wonderful
    ambassador and appreciates his willingness to serve his country,"
    White House spokeswoman Emily Lawrimore said.
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