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ANCA: State Dept. Files Reveal New Details of Evans Recall

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  • ANCA: State Dept. Files Reveal New Details of Evans Recall

    Armenian National Committee of America
    1711 N Street NW
    Washington, DC 20036
    Tel. (202) 775-1918
    Fax. (202) 775-5648
    Email [email protected]
    Internet www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    May 8, 2007
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    STATE DEPARTMENT FILES REVEAL NEW DETAILS OF EVANS RECALL

    -- Senior Official Demanded Early Return of Evans Leading to
    Vacancy in Key Ambassadorial Post

    WASHINGTON, DC - Internal State Department documents, released this
    week to the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) under the
    Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), reveal that a senior State
    Department official forced the return to the U.S. of former
    Ambassador to Armenia, John Marshall Evans, prior to U.S. Senate's
    approval of his replacement, effectively ensuring that this key
    foreign post would remain vacant.

    The key document released by the Department was an August 8, 2006
    "Sensitive-Eyes Only for Amb. Evans" memo from Assistant Secretary
    of State Daniel Fried to Ambassador Evans. In the note, the
    Assistant Secretary acknowledged Ambassador Evans' willingness to
    remain in Yerevan until the Senate had confirmed Richard Hoagland,
    the career Foreign Service officer who had been nominated by
    President Bush to fill the Yerevan ambassadorial post after the
    Evans firing.

    The relevant section of the cable reads as follows:

    "John [Evans], Thank you for your offer to remain in Yerevan in
    light of the SFRC (Senate Foreign Relations Committee) postponement
    of its consideration of Dick's [Richard Hoagland's] nomination. I
    appreciate that you are willing to serve the President as needed.
    However, I think it is best to continue with your previous plan,
    and for you to depart post by the end of the first week in
    September."

    Putting a sharp point on his direction, Assistant Secretary Fried
    closed the note by writing: "Please consider this cable your
    authorization to depart the mission."

    The Department's decision, as communicated in the August 8, 2006
    Dan Fried memo, was taken amid intense opposition by Armenian
    Americans and growing scrutiny by members of the U.S. Senate over
    Hoagland's denial of the Armenian Genocide. The Fried memo was
    sent after the Senate Foreign Relations Committee's August 1st
    postponement of its confirmation vote, and prior to the panel's
    September 7th consideration of the Hoagland nomination. Forcing
    Ambassador Evans' physical return to the U.S. prior to this vote
    afforded State Department lobbyists the "talking point" that
    opposing the Hoagland nomination would mean leaving an
    ambassadorial vacancy in Yerevan.

    The Hoagland nomination, facing bipartisan opposition, was
    ultimately blocked by Senate Foreign Relations Committee member Bob
    Menendez (D-NJ). The New Jersey legislator placed a hold on his
    confirmation by the Senate, arguing that a U.S. ambassador who
    denies the Armenian Genocide cannot be an effective U.S.
    representative in Armenia.

    Also released by the State Department was a detailed document
    tightly scripting the retractions issued in the name of Ambassador
    Evans following his February 2005 public comments to Armenian
    American audiences in which he properly characterized Ottoman
    Turkey's campaign to exterminate its Armenian population as a
    genocide. In a February 26, 2005 memo to Ambassador Evans, drafted
    by then Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Laura Kennedy and
    approved by Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs Beth
    Jones, titled "Instructions to Ambassador Evans Regarding Personal
    Statement" - the State Department dictated the exact language to be
    used in the correction issued in Evans' name.

    Among these were specific "points to use with the Government of
    Armenia," including the following guidance, that contrary to Amb.
    Evans' public statements:

    ". . .the State Department's Legal Adviser did not offer an
    official position that the events of 1915 were 'genocide by
    definition.'"

    Copies of these FOIA files are available upon request.
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