Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Menendez Hammers Turkey's "Historical Commission" Proposal

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Menendez Hammers Turkey's "Historical Commission" Proposal

    MENENDEZ HAMMERS TURKEY'S "HISTORICAL COMMISSION" PROPOSAL

    armradio.am
    25.09.2008 14:55

    New Jersey Senator Bob Menendez pressed U.S. Ambassador to Turkey
    nominee James Jeffrey to explain the Administration's apparent
    renewed backing for Turkey's widely discredited push for a "historical
    commission" on the Armenian Genocide, reported the Armenian National
    Committee of America (ANCA).

    The move comes despite the State Department's pledge, made during the
    nomination process for U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Marie Yovanovitch,
    to oppose efforts that would open to debate the fact that Ottoman
    Turkey used mass killings, ethnic cleansing, and forced deportations
    to destroy over one and half million Armenians.

    "We want to share our special thanks with Senator Menendez for,
    once again, shining a powerful international spotlight on the
    Administration's policy of complicity in Turkey's denial of the
    Armenian Genocide," stated ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. "We
    are especially for his incisive line of questioning regarding the State
    Department's flawed and inconsistent position on Turkey's self-serving
    proposal for a historical commission. A clear illustration of the
    bankruptcy of the Administration's policy on the Armenian Genocide
    was the nominee's convoluted response to the simple question, posed
    by Senator Menendez: 'If Turkey would be willing to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide, would the United States be willing to do so?'"

    Ambassador-Designate Jeffrey's confirmation hearing was chaired by
    Senator John Kerry (D-MA), who, in his opening remarks, cited his
    decades-long support for Congressional reaffirmation of the Armenian
    Genocide. Following Amb. Jeffrey's testimony, Sen. Kerry led the
    questioning on the Armenian Genocide, asking if the nominee could
    "assure the Committee that the Administration is not supporting -
    financially, rhetorically, or otherwise - an effort to convene a
    commission to settle an historical debate [on the Armenian Genocide]
    - that in effect is not a debate."

    Jeffrey responded, "Mr. Chairman, as you have indicated, the
    Administration recognizes and mourns, and is very, very, very concerned
    about the historical facts, which include, as you said, the mass
    killing and the forced exile of up to 1.5 million Armenians at the
    end of the Ottoman Empire. We support, as President Bush made clear in
    his recent statement on March 24th, the open effort on both sides to
    get to the bottom of the historical facts and to move forward as part
    of a reconciliation process both to establish closer and eventually
    full relations and to work out these dark chapters in the past."

    Sen. Kerry followed up, asking if Jeffrey is, in effect saying that
    "we are supportive of the historical commission itself and its goal? Or
    are we supportive of simply maintaining the historical records?"

    Jeffrey responded: "We are supportive of anything the two sides
    mutually agree on, Sir. And as part of any process, there should be
    a full and open review of the events of that time."

    Jeffrey's response sparked a series of probing questions from
    Senator Menendez, who opened his remarks by expressing his "dismay"
    at Jeffrey's answers, arguing, "that puts us before where we were
    when we had the Ambassador designee to Armenia [Marie Yovanovitch]
    being interviewed."

    Senator Menendez then quoted extensively from a July, 2008, letter
    from Asst. Secretary of Legislative Affairs Matthew Reynolds, issued
    to clarify various responses that U.S.

    Ambassador to Armenia Marie Yovanovitch had given during her
    confirmation hearing. The letter explained that, a proposed effort to
    bring Turkish and Armenian archivists to the U.S. is not a means to
    "open a debate on whether the Ottomans committed these horrendous acts;
    it is to help preserve the documentation that supports the truth of
    those events." The letter went on to note that "the Administration
    recognizes that the mass killings, ethnic cleansing, and forced
    deportations of over one and a half million Armenians were conducted
    by the Ottoman Empire. We indeed hold Ottoman officials responsible
    for those crimes."

    Sen. Menendez, concerned that Jeffrey had veered away from
    Administration policy articulated in the Reynolds letter, asked "The
    historical facts, as I see it, have now been admitted to by the State
    Department and clearly stated as such." And I don't get the sense
    that's what you're telling us, so that puts a complication in this
    process. Maybe you can help us out."

    Jeffrey was again evasive, responding that, "what assistant
    Sec. Reynolds wrote is U.S. government policy and we stand by it. What
    I was trying to convey was that it is also important for Turks and
    Armenians to move forward on a joint effort to work on these issues
    to come to some kind of, to the extent they can, common view of the
    historical past."

    Menendez shot back, asking "Why would we support an initiative that
    ultimately doubts whether those are the historical facts? If the Turks
    seek to do it, that's one thing. But why would we be supportive of
    an effort that ultimately undermines the very position that the State
    Department has?"

    Jeffrey responded in generalities, noting "In conflicts such as this,
    Senator, we believe, and we apply this across the board in the many
    conflicts that I have been involved in, we have an obligation to the
    historical record and to our citizens to have our own views, but
    it is also important to encourage the various sides on a dispute,
    be it this one, be it others, to try to come to some sort of joint
    understanding of the past and a joint way forward for the future."

    Menendez then went back to Sen. Kerry's original question once
    again. "Would you then, as Ambassador, be someone who would advocate
    rhetorically, financially or otherwise, that the commission should be
    constituted and move forward?" Jeffrey responded: "The effort that
    can be taken for people to review openly the facts of that period
    would be supported by me."

    Sen. Menendez would later return to Amb. Jeffrey for a second round of
    questioning, expressing frustration that the lack of "straight answers"
    from Ambassadors precludes Senators from making "straight judgments"
    on key foreign policy issues. He then asked Amb. Jeffrey, simply, if
    "If Turkey would be willing to recognize the Armenian Genocide, would
    the United States be willing to do so?" Jeffrey initially replied
    that he "can't commit the Administration to any future action,"
    but upon further questioning stated, that while Turkish recognition
    would be important, "there would be other factors that would have
    to be weighed, such as our general approach to other conflicts in
    the region and taking positions. The relationship between Turkey
    and Armenia is a major factor in the policies we take, the words we
    use. But there are other factors as well, sir."

    Menendez ended his questioning on the Administration's Armenian
    Genocide policy by asking whether Jeffrey would follow in the footsteps
    of Undersecretary Edelman and Assistant Secretary of State Dan Fried,
    who, according to multiple press accounts, last October, traveled
    to Turkey to "express regret" at House Foreign Affairs Committee
    passage of Armenian Genocide legislation. "Senator," said Jeffrey,
    "I never have and I never will express regret. This is an independent
    and equal organ of the U.S. government and it deserves the respect
    of everyone, everywhere in the world."

    Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman and Vice-Presidential
    nominee Joe Biden and other Committee members are set to submit
    additional questions to Ambassadorial nominee, who may be confirmed
    as early as Friday of this week.
Working...
X