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US Envoy Nominee Doesn't Bow To 'Genocide' Pressure

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  • US Envoy Nominee Doesn't Bow To 'Genocide' Pressure

    US ENVOY NOMINEE DOESN'T BOW TO 'GENOCIDE' PRESSURE

    Today's Zaman
    26 September 2008, Friday
    Turkey

    The Bush administration's nominee for US ambassador to Turkey has
    refused to call the killings of Anatolian Armenians during World War
    I "genocide" or "ethnic cleansing," despite pressure from a leading
    pro-Armenian Democratic senator.

    During his confirmation hearing before the US Senate's Foreign
    Relations Committee on Wednesday, career diplomat James F. Jeffrey
    responded to leading questions, particularly posed by Democratic
    Senator Robert Menendez.

    In May 2006 US President George W. Bush removed John Evans, then
    ambassador to Armenia, who had openly described the Armenian killings
    as genocide, in violation of Washington's official policy. He nominated
    career diplomat Richard E. Hoagland for the post, but Menendez blocked
    the nomination when Hoagland failed to describe the Armenian incident
    as genocide. Bush then nominated Marie Yovanovitch, who also declined
    to use the word "genocide." She recently arrived in Yerevan.

    In her opening testimony at her confirmation hearing in June,
    Yovanovitch used the terms "mass killings," "ethnic cleansing" and
    "forced deportation" when describing the incident. The first question
    posed to Jeffrey by Menendez during his confirmation hearing, according
    to the Anatolia news agency, was "What should the US do in the event
    of Turkey's acceptance of genocide of its own accord?"

    "The administration will make a decision by taking all factors
    into consideration," Jeffrey said in response. Jeffrey also said
    that he would support initiatives which encourage Turkish-Armenian
    rapprochement and noted that Washington favors the unconditional
    opening of borders with Armenia by Turkey as well as the establishment
    of diplomatic relations between the two countries.

    When Jeffrey used the term "forced exile," while speaking of the 1915
    incidents, Menendez said that he was disappointed that this term fell
    short of the term "ethnic cleansing," which was earlier used by some
    US officials.

    In response, Jeffrey said that he was behind statements by officials
    which outline US policy, but still refrained from using the term
    "ethnic cleansing," Anatolia reported.

    Armenia claims that Ottoman Turks killed up to 1.5 million Armenians
    during World War I, toward the end of the Ottoman Empire, and labels
    the killings as genocide. Turkey says that the casualty figures are
    inflated and that the deaths occurred during a time of civil conflict
    when both Armenians and Turks were killed.

    In early June Bush announced his intention to nominate Jeffrey as
    the new US ambassador to Turkey, replacing the current Ambassador
    Ross Wilson. Jeffrey is a career member of the Senior Foreign
    Service currently serving as deputy national security advisor to
    the president. Before he can begin his mission in Turkey, Jeffrey's
    nomination must be approved by the US Senate.

    Earlier this week, Bryan Ardouny, executive director of the Armenian
    Assembly of America, outlined the expectations which the Armenian
    diaspora in the US has of the ambassadorial nominee. "This represents
    a critical opportunity for the US ambassador to Turkey to go further
    than Ambassador Yovanovitch and, this time, to squarely affirm the
    Armenian genocide," said Ardouny.
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