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ANCA: LA Times Calls on Senate to Block Hoagland Nomination

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  • ANCA: LA Times Calls on Senate to Block Hoagland Nomination

    Armenian National Committee of America
    1711 N Street NW
    Washington, DC 20036
    Tel: (202) 775-1918
    Fax: (202) 775-5648
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Internet: www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    July 16, 2006
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    LOS ANGELES TIMES CALLS ON SENATE
    TO BLOCK HOAGLAND NOMINATION

    -- Urges Foreign Relations Committee to Require
    that Nominee Properly Recognizes the Armenian
    Genocide as a Condition for Approval

    WASHINGTON, DC - A policy editorial published today by the Los
    Angeles Times, largest newspaper in the Western United States,
    marks a major and very public setback for the U.S. Department of
    State's increasingly untenable policy of complicity in Turkey's
    denial of the Armenian Genocide, reported the Armenian National
    Committee of America (ANCA).

    The editorial sharply criticizes the Bush Administration's decision
    to fire the U.S. Ambassador to Armenia, John Evans, for truthfully
    discussing the Armenian Genocide.

    Noting that half of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has
    already raised concerns about this matter, the editorial board
    calls on the panel to block the nomination of the ambassador-
    designate, Richard Hoagland, until he properly recognizes the
    Armenian Genocide. They closed their powerfully worded piece by
    stressing that, "the Bush administration should have the courage of
    its lack of conviction and explain forthrightly ­ not just to
    Armenian Americans but to all Americans who believe in calling evil
    by its proper name ­ why U.S. policy is being dictated by Ankara
    nationalists."

    The Sunday edition of the Los Angeles Times has a circulation to
    over 1.2 million households and reaches millions more over the
    internet.

    To join with the thousands of activists around the nation who have
    written to the State Department on this matter, visit:
    http://capwiz.com/anca/issues/alert/?alerti d=8896316&type=CO

    The full text of the Los Angeles Times editorial is provided below.

    #####

    http://www.latimes.com/news/printed ition/opinion/la-ed-
    armenia16jul16,1,920143.story ?ctrack=1&cset=true
    >From the Los Angeles Times

    EDITORIAL
    Speak no evil?
    July 16, 2006

    WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU refer to Turkey's 1915-1923 genocide of
    Armenians, accurately, as "genocide"? In Turkey, you face a
    possible three-year jail term, even if it wasn't you using the term
    but a character in your novel. In the United States, you just lose
    your job as ambassador to Armenia.

    The novelist is Elif Shafak, who learned last week she will go on
    trial for defamation of the Turkish Republic. The former ambassador
    is John M. Evans, who was recalled from Yerevan in May after
    referring to the "Armenian genocide" in a speech before a group of
    Armenian Americans in February 2005. As one State Department bigwig
    told an Armenian newspaper: "Ambassadors serve the president, and
    they are obliged to follow his policy. President Bush's policy as
    regards the mass killings of Armenians is precise."

    Precisely what purpose this policy serves is clear: avoid using the
    most truthful word in the English language to describe an eight-
    decade-old atrocity for fear of offending a crucial NATO ally. As
    Bush's proposed replacement for Evans, Richard Hoagland, put it
    last month during his confirmation hearing, "Instead of getting
    stuck in the past and vocabulary, I would like to see what we can
    do to bring different sides together."

    Vocabulary may not be the president's best subject ­ Bush himself
    has poked fun at his frequent malapropisms ­ but he's shown he
    knows the meaning of the word "genocide." Campaigning for the White
    House in 2000, Bush told Armenian American groups that "the 20th
    century was marred by wars of unimaginable brutality, mass murder
    and genocide" and that "history records that the Armenians were the
    first people of the last century to have endured these cruelties ...
    If elected president, I would ensure that our nation properly
    recognizes the tragic suffering of the Armenian people."

    It's one of the more blatant of Bush's broken campaign promises.
    Luckily, the Senate is showing signs of giving this rhetorical
    appeasement the rebuke it deserves. Half of the senators on the
    Foreign Relations Committee have demanded that the State Department
    give an official explanation for Evans' premature recall, and some
    have hinted that Hoagland's appointment could hang in the balance.
    They should block the nomination altogether until the ambassador-
    to-be dares to utter the g-word.

    And the Bush administration should have the courage of its lack of
    conviction and explain forthrightly ­ not just to Armenian
    Americans but too all Americans who believe in calling evil by its
    proper name ­ why U.S. policy is being dictated by Ankara
    nationalists.

    #####

    --Boundary_(ID_ckiBmJ mKiMwcGTFuCR54tw)--
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