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U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Approves Ambassador Nominee

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  • U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Approves Ambassador Nominee

    U.S. SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE APPROVES AMBASSADOR NOMINEE TO ARMENIA MARIE YOVANOVITCH

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    30.07.2008 12:39 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ In the midst of mounting Senate scrutiny and the
    prospect of a "hold" on Marie Yovanovitch's nomination to serve as
    the next U.S. Ambassador to Armenia, the State Department, cleared
    the way for her approval by retreating from statements calling into
    question the historical record of the Ottoman Empire's destruction of
    its Armenian population, Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
    Communications Director Elizabeth Chouldjian told PanARMENIAN.Net.

    The Department of State letter - sent in response to sustained pressure
    from Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Joe Biden (D-DE), and
    Senators Barbara Boxer (D-CA), and Bob Menendez (D-NJ) - was issued
    only hours before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee was set to
    vote on her nomination. The Committee confirmed the nomination by
    voice vote, with Senator Boxer going on record against the nomination,
    citing the Administration's reluctance to properly characterize the
    Armenian Genocide. The full Senate will likely consider her nomination
    prior to their August recess.

    "Today's State Department letter, although clearly falling short of
    America's moral responsibility and national interest in recognizing and
    condemning the Armenian Genocide, did mark a step in the direction of
    distancing U.S. policy from the dictates of the Turkish government,"
    said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian.

    "While we, of course, remain troubled by the President's refusal
    to properly characterize the Armenian Genocide - as reflected in
    Ambassador Yovanovitch's responses - we were gratified to see that,
    as a result of pressure from Senators Biden, Boxer, and Menendez,
    the Department of State has retreated from its most offensive and
    factually unsupportable assertions calling into question the historical
    fact of Ottoman Turkey's destruction of its Armenian population."

    "The U.S. government - and certainly I - acknowledges and mourns
    the mass killings, ethnic cleansing, and forced deportations that
    devastated over one and a half million Armenians at the end of the
    Ottoman Empire. The United States recognizes these events as one of the
    greatest tragedies of the 20th century, the "Medz Yeghern" or Great
    Calamity, as many Armenians refer to it. That is why every April the
    President honors the victims and expresses American solidarity with
    the Armenian people on Remembrance Day.

    The Administration understands that many Americans and many Armenians
    believe that the events of the past that I have referred to should
    be called "genocide." It has been President Bush's policy, as well
    as that of previous presidents of both parties, not to use that
    term. The President's focus is on encouraging Turkish citizens to
    reconcile with their past and with the Armenians. He seeks to support
    the painstaking progress achieved to date. President Bush believes
    that the best way to honor the victims is to remember the past, so it
    is never repeated, and to look to the future to promote understanding
    and reconciliation between the peoples and governments of Armenia and
    Turkey. A key part of that effort is to end Armenia's isolation in the
    region by encouraging normalization of relations between Armenia and
    Turkey and the opening of their land border. The Armenian government
    has requested that we facilitate this process. It will not be easy
    nor will it likely be quick, but there are some hopeful signs,"
    Ambassador-Designate Yovanovitch said in her testimony before the
    Senate Foreign Relations Committee on June 19.

    President Bush's previous nominee as U.S. Ambassador to Armenia,
    Richard Hoagland, was subject to two legislative holds by Sen. Menendez
    and was ultimately withdrawn by the Administration, following the
    nominee's statements denying the Armenian Genocide.
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