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ANKARA: New American Ambassador To Armenia Finally Arrives In Yereva

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  • ANKARA: New American Ambassador To Armenia Finally Arrives In Yereva

    NEW AMERICAN AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA FINALLY ARRIVES IN YEREVAN

    Today's Zaman
    Sept 19 2008
    Turkey

    The United States has finally sent an ambassador to Armenia, more
    than two years after the previous one had his tour of duty cut short.

    The US Embassy in Yerevan said Marie Yovanovitch arrived Wednesday
    night to take up her new post. A career diplomat, she had previously
    served as the US ambassador to Kyrgyzstan.

    Lawmakers had delayed consideration of Yovanovitch's nomination to the
    Armenian post in a dispute over the US refusal to label as genocide
    the World War I-era killings of Anatolian Armenians.

    Armenian-American groups have been seeking to force the Bush
    administration to change its policy on the 1915 incidents, but
    Yovanovitch clearly adhered to the US line of refusing to label the
    incidents as "genocide" at her confirmation hearing in the Senate. Last
    year the White House withdrew its nomination of career diplomat
    Richard Hoagland after one lawmaker blocked it in an objection to
    that policy. The post had remained vacant for two years. Armenia,
    with the backing of its diaspora, claims that up to 1.5 million of
    its kin were slaughtered in orchestrated killings in 1915. Turkey
    rejects the claims, saying that 300,000 Armenians along with at least
    as many Turks died in civil strife that emerged when the Armenians
    took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia.

    Washington has had no full-time ambassador in Yerevan since May 2006
    and has attached great importance to sending Yovanovitch there at a
    time of increasing Russian influence in the region and a worsening
    conflict with Iran over its alleged development of nuclear arms,
    officials said at the time.

    In May 2006 Bush removed John Evans, the last ambassador to Armenia,
    who had openly described the Armenian killings as genocide in violation
    of Washington's official policy. He then nominated career diplomat
    Hoagland for the post, but Senator Robert Menendez, a Democrat
    from New Jersey, blocked the nomination for failing to describe the
    Armenian killings as genocide. Bush then proposed Yovanovitch, who
    also declined to use the word "genocide."

    Yovanovitch's arrival in Yerevan also comes at a time of rising hopes
    for dialogue between Armenia and Turkey after Armenian President Serzh
    Sarksyan invited Turkish President Abdullah Gul to watch a World Cup
    qualifying match between the Turkish and Armenian national teams in
    Yerevan and Gul accepted.

    Earlier this month Gul was the first Turkish president to set
    foot in Armenia since the country declared independence from the
    Soviet Union in 1991. Though Turkey was among the first countries
    to recognize Armenia's independence, it closed its border with the
    country and severed formal ties with Yerevan after Armenia occupied
    the Azerbaijani territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. But the origins of
    the dispute between Turkey and Armenia go further back in history.
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