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ANCA-WR: 97% of Armenian Americans Oppose Hoagland Nomination

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  • ANCA-WR: 97% of Armenian Americans Oppose Hoagland Nomination

    Armenian National Committee of America
    Western Region
    104 N. Belmont, Suite 200
    Glendale, CA 91204
    Tel: (818) 500-1918
    Fax: (818) 246-7353
    Email: [email protected]
    Internet: www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    January 8, 2007
    Contact: Lerna Kayserian
    Tel: (818) 500-1918

    NINETY-SEVEN PERCENT OF ARMENIAN AMERICANS OPPOSE HOAGLAND NOMINATION


    GLENDALE, CA -- Ninety-seven percent of Armenian Americans support
    opposition to the confirmation of Richard Hoagland as U.S.
    Ambassador to Armenia, according to a new Internet poll conducted
    by the ANCA-Western Region over the past two weeks in nineteen
    Western U.S. states. This viewpoint is aligned with the policy
    position of the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA),
    which has been leading and vigorously pursuing this issue in
    Congress and with the Administration.

    The 97% figure is based on polling conducted between December 28,
    2006 and January 8, 2007. Asked, as part of a survey of public
    policy priorities, about their views on the U.S. Senate's
    opposition to Hoagland's confirmation, 94% of the respondents said
    that they "strongly agreed" with this opposition. An additional 3%
    noted that they "somewhat agreed" with this opposition. One
    percent reported that they "somewhat disagreed" with opposing
    Hoagland, and 2% indicated that they "strongly disagreed" with the
    opposition to his confirmation.

    The controversy over the Hoagland nomination, which was most
    recently covered in a January 7th Los Angeles Times article (see
    text below) began with the firing of his predecessor, John Evans,
    for speaking truthfully about the Armenian Genocide. This firing,
    for breaching the State Department's policy of complicity in the
    Turkish government's denial of this crime, was compounded by
    Hoagland's outright denial of the Genocide in response to questions
    posed during and after his June 2006 confirmation hearing before
    the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Based on growing
    reservations over the Evans dismissal and, later, Hoagland's deeply
    offensive responses, more than half of the Senate Foreign Relations
    Committee members and over 60 U.S. Representatives formally raised
    their concerns on this matter with the Administration. Senator Bob
    Menendez (D-NJ) moved on September 7, 2006 to place a "hold" on the
    Hoagland nomination, effectively blocking the nomination. On
    December 1st of last year the New Jersey legislator joined with
    incoming Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) in calling on the
    Administration to offer a new candidate for this post.

    The full results of the ANCA-WR Internet poll, including details
    about Armenian American views about the Armenian Genocide
    Resolution, will be issued shortly.

    #####

    The Los Angeles Times - January 7, 2007

    Armenian Genocide Question Hits Home
    The former U.S. ambassador's use of the term leaves Congress poised
    for a battle between pragmatism and principle.

    By Maura Reynolds, Times Staff Writer
    January 7, 2007

    WASHINGTON - Nearly two years ago, John Evans did something no U.S.
    ambassador to Armenia before him had done: He used the word
    "genocide" - in public - to describe the deaths of about 1.2
    million Armenians at the hands of Ottoman Turks.

    It has long been a sore point with Armenian Americans that the U.S.
    government does not refer to the killings that began in 1915 as
    genocide, and Evans' use of the word did not signal a change in
    that policy. It did set off a slow-boiling controversy that
    eventually cost him his job.

    Now, the issue is preparing to boil over again, setting up a clash
    between the Democratic-controlled Congress and the Republican White
    House. The dispute has stalled the confirmation of Evans' successor
    and strained U.S. relations with Turkey, a key U.S. ally in the
    Middle East.

    "Based on what I've seen, this is headed to a confrontation," said
    a senior Democratic congressional aide. "It's an issue that's a
    flashpoint of controversy for both parties."

    It started at UC Berkeley, in February 2005, soon after Evans took
    up his ambassadorship.

    "I will today call it the Armenian genocide," Evans said, according
    to a transcript by one of the groups attending the gathering hosted
    by the university's Armenian studies program.

    Evans' comments floored - and pleased - his audience, even though
    he made it clear that he was articulating a personal view, not U.S.
    policy.

    "I recall being surprised at that moment," said Stephan Astourian,
    executive director of Berkeley's Armenian Studies program, who
    organized the session.

    Though Armenian Americans and others consider Evans' statement an
    act of courage for which he has been unfairly punished,
    policymakers call it a misjudgment that could fuel anti-Western
    sentiment in Turkey.

    Historians have long used the term "genocide" to describe the
    murderous campaign against the Armenians in Turkey. Nearly the
    entire population of Armenians was executed, starved or forced into
    exile on the orders of the ruling Young Turk Party. Outside Turkey,
    there is little debate over the facts or the use of the word
    "genocide."

    In Turkey, however, official history has long disputed the use of
    that term. As a result, American officials have used all sorts of
    others - "mass killing," "massacres," "atrocities," "annihilation"
    - but have stopped short of "genocide."

    "We have never said it wasn't genocide," explained a senior State
    Department official, who agreed to discuss formation of U.S. policy
    in detail on condition he not be further identified. "We just
    haven't used that word."

    State Department officials believe that Turks will come to their
    own acceptance of the term from internal debate.

    "That debate needs to happen, but it needs to be a Turkish debate,"
    the official said. "It has been our view that our position of
    encouraging that debate - and not allowing Turks an easy out to
    say, 'This is foreign pressure' - is more effective."

    Most Armenian Americans and many members of Congress disagree,
    arguing that the U.S. government should call the killings
    "genocide."

    In a short interview, his first since leaving the State Department,
    Evans declined to discuss his motives in making the genocide
    statement, but said that "it wasn't a slip of the tongue."

    "I knew it was not the policy of the United States" to use the word
    "genocide," Evans said.

    "Ninety years is a long time," Evans added, referring to the
    decades since the genocide began. "At some point you have to call a
    spade a spade."

    In the months after Evans' remark, the State Department made clear
    its displeasure. By July 2005, "it was absolutely crystal clear"
    that he would be forced out, he said. Still, it took more than a
    year more for him to leave.

    "Evans was a career foreign service officer, and you do not go
    after a career foreign service officer lightly," said a second
    State Department official.

    Evans left Armenia in September and formally retired from the State
    Department last month.

    Meanwhile, the American Foreign Service Assn., the organization
    that represents U.S. foreign service officers, granted Evans its
    2005 award for "constructive dissent" by a senior diplomat. But
    weeks later, the group rescinded the prize, arousing suspicion that
    the State Department had intervened.

    Foreign Service Assn. officials who agreed to discuss the matter
    said they took back the award after learning that Evans apparently
    did not first go through internal channels of dissent before
    publicly stating his views.

    "Ambassador Evans' action - admirable as it was - did not fit the
    category of 'constructive dissent,' " the group said in a
    statement.

    State Department officials said they felt blindsided by Evans'
    genocide remarks.

    The unanswered questions about Evans' departure have stalled the
    nomination of a successor.

    In May, President Bush nominated Ambassador Richard Hoagland, who
    most recently served as ambassador to Tajikistan. But in September,
    Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) put a parliamentary hold on
    Hoagland's nomination, blocking it until the end of the
    congressional session, when the nomination expired.

    Some Armenian Americans took issue with Hoagland, complaining that
    in written responses to questions from the Senate Foreign Relations
    Committee, he was dismissive of the Armenian genocide. Last month,
    Menendez and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) demanded
    the administration send over a new nominee.

    Bush will have to decide whether to renominate Hoagland. The
    administration appears to be standing behind him, and complains
    that he has been turned into a scapegoat over Evans' dismissal.

    "Senators can say that our policy on the Armenian massacres is
    wrong, but it's wrong to punish the president's nominee for
    adhering to the president's policy," said the senior State
    Department official, adding that some of Hoagland's opponents had
    "twisted" his responses on the genocide.

    "He's being tarred as a [genocide] denier," said the senior State
    Department official. "And the only reason it's being done is that
    they are angry about Evans for the wrong reasons."

    Not all Armenian Americans oppose Hoagland's nomination. The
    Armenian Assembly of America has said that although it opposes
    administration policy, it would support Hoagland. And the Armenian
    government has said that policy on the genocide issue should take
    second place to more immediate problems, including diplomatic
    relations with Turkey.

    The Republic of Armenia became an independent state after the
    breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991, and today has a population of
    about 3 million.

    To both Democrats and Republicans, support from Armenian Americans
    is important. There are an estimated 1.4 million Armenian
    Americans, with the largest population center in Glendale.

    In the end, Democrats now in control of Congress may need to decide
    between pragmatism and principle.

    "To the extent that Armenia goes without a U.S. ambassador, that's
    a bad thing by anyone's standard," said a Democratic staffer
    involved in the confirmation process. "We're 1,000% supportive of
    the Armenian community on the genocide issue. But in this case, the
    [State Department] policy is going to be very tough to change, and
    I don't think holding up an ambassador is going to get them to
    change their policy."
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