Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Potential Envoy To Armenia Skirts Word 'Genocide'

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

  • Potential Envoy To Armenia Skirts Word 'Genocide'

    POTENTIAL ENVOY TO ARMENIA SKIRTS WORD 'GENOCIDE'
    by Michael Doyle Bee Washington Bureau

    Fresno Bee (California)
    June 29, 2006 Thursday
    Final Edition

    America's next ambassador to Armenia is a verbal gymnast. He has to
    be to keep his job.

    On Wednesday, career Foreign Service officer Richard E. Hoagland
    treaded prudently through his confirmation hearing.

    He picked his way around the word "genocide" in describing the
    mass slaughter of Armenians between 1915 and 1923. The events were
    "horrific" and "well-documented" and "historic," Hoagland told the
    Senate Foreign Relations Committee, but the genocide word did not
    cross his lips.

    "It's a tragedy; everybody agrees with that," Hoagland said, but
    "instead of getting stuck in the past and vocabulary, I would like
    to see what we can do to bring different sides together."

    While the highly decorated Hoagland appears a shoo-in for the Armenia
    post, his reticence did not sit well with the three senators who
    showed up for his confirmation hearing.

    "It's almost absurd to sit here, and you can't utter the word
    'genocide,' " said Republican Sen. Norm Coleman of Minnesota. "We
    have ambassadors who can't use a word, just a word."

    The committee's other 16 members, including California Democratic
    Sen. Barbara Boxer, did not attend the hearing that lasted about an
    hour. But for a number of San Joaquin Valley residents, the diplomatic
    questions raised during Hoagland's hearing have special meaning. In
    regions like the San Joaquin Valley, Southern California, New Jersey
    and Michigan, well-established Armenian-American populations maintain
    both a tangible and symbolic stake in U.S.-Armenia relations.

    "The local community follows with great interest events in Armenia
    and also U.S. government policy," noted Barlow Der Mugrdechian,
    lecturer in Armenian studies at California State University, Fresno.

    In particular, Der Mugrdechian said, activists have tracked the fate
    of Hoagland's predecessor, Ambassador John Evans. The Yale-educated
    Evans ran afoul of his State Department superiors when he acknowledged
    the accuracy of the phrase "Armenian genocide."

    "I informed myself in depth about it," Evans told an
    Armenian-American audience in Berkeley in February 2005. "I think we,
    the U.S. government, owe you, our fellow citizens, a more frank and
    honest way of discussing this problem. I think it is unbecoming of us,
    as Americans, to play word games here. I believe in calling things
    by their name."

    That was contrary to the Bush administration's policy of avoiding
    the term, out of deference to Turkey's sensibilities. Within a week,
    the State Department issued a statement from Evans in which he called
    his remarks "inappropriate" and said he "deeply" regretted them.

    State Department officials have declined to characterize Evans as
    having been fired, but his Armenian tenure was clearly cut short. He
    became ambassador in September 2004, and Hoagland was announced as
    his replacement last month. By contrast, his predecessors served
    three-year terms.

    "Allowing John Evans to continue as ambassador to Armenia sends a
    strong message on the necessity of Turkish recognition, and will be
    an important step in establishing the U.S. position on the Armenian
    Genocide," Rep. George Radanovich, R-Mariposa, and three other House
    members wrote the State Department recently.

    Radanovich noted that "evidence points" to the conclusion that
    Evans was removed from his diplomatic posting prematurely because
    of the controversy. Although several senators said they regretted
    the necessity of replacing Evans now, Hoagland was not pressed to
    explain why his predecessor left his post.

    "I know the policy," Hoagland said, "and my responsibility is to
    support the president." If he had any concerns, Hoagland added,
    he would raise them "internally" and "through proper channels."

    Hoagland previously served as U.S. ambassador to Tajikistan. He has
    considerable experience with some precarious parts of the world,
    including service as the lead Afghanistan analyst with the State
    Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research. While in Pakistan
    in the late 1980s, he worked with the Afghan resistance.
Working...
X